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  1. When Paul Caldwell Wilson was born on 17 December 1876, in Chicago, Cook, Illinois, United States, his father, Marshall Johnson Wilson, was 35 and his mother, Maria Jane Caldwell, was 27. He married Frances Coralie Perkins in 1913. They were the parents of at least 1 daughter.

  2. Aug 30, 2018 · Paul Caldwell Wilson. (abt. 1876 - 1952) Paul Caldwell Wilson. Born about 1876 in New York, United States. Ancestors. Son of Marshall J Wilson and Maria Jane (Caldwell) Wilson. [sibling (s) unknown] Husband of Frances Coralie Perkins — married 26 Sep 1913 in New York, New York. [children unknown]

    • Male
    • Frances Coralie Perkins
    • She Sought Education—In The Classroom and in The World.
    • She Changed Her Name—And Then Refused to Change It Again When She Got married.
    • Al Smith and Franklin Delano Roosevelt Helped Her Move Up in The World.
    • She Became The First Female Member of A President’s Cabinet.
    • She Cultivated A Maternal Image.
    • She Helped Formulate The New Deal and Passed Social Security.
    • She Was Attacked as A Communist and A Secret Jew.
    • She Tried to Save Jewish Refugees Fleeing The Nazis.

    Born in 1880, Frances Perkins grew up in Worcester, Massachusetts. Her father, who ran a stationery store, had not attended college, but he was a voracious reader who studied the law and read classical poetry in his spare time. When Fannie (as she was then known) was eight, he began teaching her Greek. She later attended Worcester Classical High Sc...

    Born Fannie Coralie Perkins, she changed her name to Frances around 1904while living in Chicago. Biographers have suggested that, in doing so, she was signaling her independence from her parents—she converted from Congregationalist to Episcopalian around the same time—or desiring a name that was more gender-neutral. In another signal of independenc...

    Perkins spent two years on the state Industrial Commission, earning an annual salary of $8000—quite the step up from the $40 per month she earned at her first social work job in Philadelphia (which her father had still considered far too much for a woman). After Smith was defeated for reelection, Perkins resigned from the Commission and worked for ...

    Perkins was uncertain about whether she wanted to follow Roosevelt to Washington. During his years as governor of New York, the two had developed a close working relationship, and Perkins was overflowing with ideas about how to use government to protect workers and help the public. But Perkins hated media attention—she once saidthat having her pict...

    Since entering the political arena, Perkins had kept a red folder of observations titled “Notes on the Male Mind.” She paid careful attention to male colleagues’ preferences and expectations so that, whenever possible, she could manipulate gender stereotypes to her advantage. In 1913, at the beginning of her career in New York politics, she encount...

    Perkins supported and helped shepherd New Deal programs like the Civilian Conservation Corps, the Federal Emergency Relief Administration, and the National Industrial Recovery Act. Labor historian C. E. Daniel stated, “It is hard to think of any [New Deal] accomplishments related to labor that don’t reflect the contributions of Frances Perkins.” Bu...

    Like President Barack Obama, Perkins faced her own “birther” controversy: She was accused of secretly being a Russian Jew. Anti-Semitic pamphleteer Robert Edward Edmondson—who believed the New Deal was directed by Jews who wished to turn America into a Communist country—identified Perkinsas one of the six main “sinister forces” in the Roosevelt adm...

    After coming to power in January 1933, Adolf Hitler quickly began stripping German Jews of their civil rights. Denied passports by the German government and visas by the U.S. State Department, Jews who wished to escape the Nazi regime had almost no chance of reaching the United States. Perkins considered the situation a humanitarian crisis, and beg...

  3. Jul 8, 2020 · During this period, Perkins married Paul Caldwell Wilson, an ambitious progressive economist. After her wedding, journalists came to her house asking why she kept her maiden name, an unheard-of practice. For Perkins, it represented a modern and equitable partnership.

  4. Historical Photos and Other Documents for Paul Caldwell Wilson. These images and documents might connect to your family member. View all 3 photos and documents. Surname meaning for Wilson. English: from the Middle English personal name Will + patronymic -son ‘son of Will’. Will was a very common medieval short form of William.

  5. Feb 27, 2010 · Paul Caldwell Wilson Birth 1876 Death 1952 (aged 75–76) Burial. Glidden Cemetery. Newcastle, ...

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