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  1. Jul 8, 2020 · Frances Perkins was the first female presidential cabinet secretary and the central architect of the New Deal. She designed Social Security and public works programs that brought millions out of poverty. Her work resulted in the construction of hospitals, public schools, and related infrastructure.

  2. Sep 16, 2019 · Updated on September 16, 2019. Frances Perkins (April 10, 1880 — May 14, 1965) became the first woman to serve in a president's cabinet when she was appointed the Secretary of Labor by Franklin D. Roosevelt. She played a prominent public role throughout Roosevelt's 12-year presidency and was instrumental in shaping New Deal policies and major ...

  3. The Frances Perkins Homestead, a fifty-seven-acre National Historic Landmark, a saltwater farm in the nation’s northeast corner, is a tangible reminder that America is intended to be a vast homestead for all its people, a lively household for one and all, and that concern for the common good should govern our life together.

  4. Apr 9, 2024 · Born in 1880 in Boston, Massachusetts, Frances Perkins is known as the woman behind the New Deal legislation. A lifelong labor advocate and social reformer, Perkins’ dedication to workers’ rights and safety was shaped early on by the communities where she learned, lived, and worked.

  5. Frances Perkins was the first woman to hold a position in a Presidential Cabinet in the United States. 2. Perkins was responsible for the design, passage, and implementation of the Social Security Act of 1935. 3. Perkins used visitor visas to rescue Jewish refugees from Europe and exercised her discretionary powers as Secretary of Labor to ...

  6. Frances Perkins was born in 1880 in Massachusetts. During her childhood, she often spent summers visiting her grandmother at the Perkins Family Homestead in Newcastle, Maine. She always considered this her "true home," and lived there later in life. 1 Perkins challenged gender norms of the day by attending college.

  7. Hall of Secretaries: Frances Perkins. Tenure: March 4, 1933 to June 30, 1945. From Massachusetts; graduate of Mount Holyoke College. Trained as a social worker, worked in settlement houses in Chicago (Hull House) and Philadelphia, and was involved in the reform efforts spawned by the tragic Triangle Shirtwaist Co. Fire in New York City.

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