A Brief Biography Of Fannie Perkins

2008 Words9 Pages

According to author Downey, Fannie Perkins was born in Beacon Hills Massachusetts on April 10, 1880 where she grew up in Worchester Massachusetts with her sister, Ethel Perkins. After graduating from high school, Fannie then applied to a women’s college and decided to go to Mount Holyoke which was in Worchester. During college, Fannie met a woman named Florence Kelley; she was an executive secretary of the National Consumers League. Florence spoke about making an association that was devoted to “abolishing child labor and eliminating tenement work and workshops” (p.12). Fannie looked up to Florence as a mentor for the reason she thought Florence was very politically sweeping. After she graduated college, Fannie had a great passion for helping …show more content…

She then talked to Harlan Fiske Stone about her situation and he said to Frances “that she should rely on the federal government’s taxing power” (Sreenivasan, 2009). Roosevelt then wrote a message to congress about the social security act. She was a part of Roosevelts new deal in 1935 the social security act was passed by Roosevelt. In 1938 the Fair Labor Standards Act passed it was a part of Roosevelt’s New Deal. The Act was for minimum wages, maximum hours per week, and also to end child labor (Sreenivasan, …show more content…

Everyone in this era was very old school. She grew up in a preserved world where men ruled everything basically. Until she grew older and women started to work more. The setting that she was in was very moderate compared to the present. Today people are more opened and most men respect women in the working area. Back then Frances would get bashed at by guys for being the first women in the Governors and Presidents cabinet. She was very fierce; she didn’t care what other people thought about her being a woman. Frances was one of the women who were appointed as an investigator for the New York State Factory Committee. She helped educate political people about conditions under the working women labored (Boris & Orleck, 2011). Women now still don’t have equal pay or have respect for things that they do. When they passed the fair labor act Frances mentioned that “ work conditions it did not just affect the workers-they also had an impact on the economy”