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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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On May 2, 1943 the President went on the air to ask the miners to go back to work. Lewis was awfully mad about this. I recommended strongly against it. Lewis had seen Ickes, privately, secretively, unknown to anybody. It was agreeable that the government should seize the mines and turn them over to the Department of the Interior to operate, the Secretary of the Interior being put in charge. That was fine and the orders went out that it was to be okay.

It was Harry Hopkins who insisted that the President go on the air that night and make an appeal to the miners to go back to work, announcing that he had signed this order, that he was sympathetic with the miners, that everything would be done to see that their lot in life was made better, and so forth and so on, making a personal appeal for them to go back to work. This made Lewis perfectly furious.

When I learned that that was in the air and was Harry's idea, I intervened. It was none of Harry's business really and he shouldn't have recommended it to the President. Harry by this time was taking a great deal of responsibility for the general publicity and for the general conduct of the war. He felt that the people of the country were very upset and very disturbed that Lewis was defying the government. He felt that something must be done, that the President





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