is the Washington, D.C. headquarters of the
United States Department of Labor and is located at 200 Constitution Avenue NW and runs alongside
Interstate 395. , a
U.S. National Historic Landmark since 1991, in
Washington, D.C. Perkins is famous for being the first woman cabinet member, as well as from her policy accomplishments. She was heavily involved with many issues associated with the
social safety net including the creation of Social Security,
unemployment insurance in the United States, the federal minimum wage, and federal laws regulating child labor. Frances Perkins championed the rights of immigrants. In her role as cabinet secretary, she facilitated the immigration of thousands of Jews to the U.S. from Germany and other European nations who were escaping Nazi persecution in the 1930s—including hundreds of Jewish children in collaboration with
German Jewish Children's Aid—all in the face of American antisemitism and a restrictive immigration system. In 1967, the
Telluride House and
Cornell University's
School of Industrial and Labor Relations established the Frances Perkins Memorial Fellowship. In 1982, Perkins was inducted into the
National Women's Hall of Fame. In 2015, Perkins was named by Equality Forum as one of their 31 Icons of the 2015
LGBT History Month. In 2019, she was announced as among the members of the inaugural class of the Government Hall of Fame. Also that year,
Elizabeth Warren used a podium built with wood salvaged from the
Perkins Homestead. That same year,
Time created 89 new covers to celebrate women of the year starting from 1920; it chose Perkins for 1933. Perkins remains a prominent alumna of
Mount Holyoke College, whose Frances Perkins Program allows "women of non-traditional age" (i.e., age 24 or older) to complete a bachelor of arts degree. There are approximately 140 Frances Perkins scholars each year.
Character in historical context Perkins’s leadership has had a profound impact on women’s history in the United States by leading the way for women as they assume powerful roles in government. Perkins had a cool personality that held her aloof from the crowd. On one occasion, however, she engaged in some heated name-calling with
Alfred P. Sloan, the chairman of the board at General Motors. During a punishing United Auto Workers strike, she phoned Sloan in the middle of the night and called him a scoundrel and a skunk for not meeting the union's demands. She said, "You don't deserve to be counted among decent men. You'll go to hell when you die." Sloan's late-night response was one of irate indignation. Her achievements indicate her great love of workers and lower-class groups, but her conservative upbringing held her back from mingling freely and exhibiting personal affection . She was well-suited for the high-level efforts to effect sweeping reforms, but never caught the public's eye or its affection.
Memorials and monuments President
Jimmy Carter renamed the headquarters of the U.S. Department of Labor in Washington, D.C., the
Frances Perkins Building in 1980. Perkins was honored with a postage stamp that same year.
Her home in Washington, D.C. from 1937 to 1940, and
her Maine family home are both designated
National Historic Landmarks. The
Frances Perkins Center is a nonprofit organization located at the Frances Perkins Homestead in Newcastle, Maine, which was designated as a National Historic Landmark in 2014. In December 2024, the site was named a
National Monument by President
Joe Biden. On April 10, 2003, a historical marker honoring Perkins was dedicated in
Homestead, Pennsylvania, at the southwest corner of 9th and Amity. On October 30, 2024, a plaque honoring Perkins was unveiled at 121 Washington Place in
Greenwich Village, where Perkins once lived.
Maine Department of Labor mural A
mural depicting Perkins was displayed in the Maine Department of Labor headquarters, the native state of her parents. On March 23, 2011, Maine's Republican governor,
Paul LePage, ordered the mural removed. A spokesperson for the governor said he received complaints about the mural from state business officials and an "anonymous" fax charging that it was reminiscent of "communist
North Korea where they use these murals to brainwash the masses". LePage also ordered that the names of seven conference rooms in the state department of labor be changed, including one named after Perkins. , the mural resides in the
Maine State Museum, at the entrance to the
Maine State Library and Maine State Archives.
Veneration In 2022, Frances Perkins was officially added to the
Episcopal Church liturgical calendar with a feast day on 13 May.
In popular culture Perkins is a minor character in the 1977
Broadway musical Annie, in which she, alongside Harold Ickes, is ordered by Roosevelt to sing along to the song
Tomorrow with the title character. It is during this scene in the show that Roosevelt's cabinet comes up with the idea of the New Deal. In the 1987 American movie
Dirty Dancing, the lead character Frances "Baby" Houseman reveals that she was named after Perkins.
David Brooks's 2015 book
The Road to Character includes an extensive chapter biography of Perkins.
Becoming Madam Secretary is a novel by New York Times author Stephanie Dray that tells the story of Ms. Perkins’s life. It was copyrighted in 2024 and published by Berkley, an imprint of Penguin Random House LLC in hard cover and paperback editions and by Thorndike Press in a large-type edition. ==See also==