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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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Part:         Session:         Page of 912

He's got to do it.”

That was the way I felt about him. He had to do it if it killed him. It didn't matter.

That was that. I mean, I knew - I had heard, I'd learned from somebody - either Pa Watson or Mrs. Roosevelt had said that Anna Roosevelt Boettiger was going with them. I thought that was a little odd, but - yes, Pa Watson was the one who told me this. He said, “You know, Anna can do things with her father and with other people that the boys can't. It's no sense taking Elliott or Jim or any of the boys, because they can't handle their father. They can't manage him. If he wants to see somebody, he'll see him. ‘Come right in!' Anna can handle him. She can manage him. She can tell him, ‘You mustn't see people. You mustn't do that. You mustn't talk with them. It tires you out. You'll be no good tomorrow.' And she can also handle the other people. Without alarming them, she can handle them, and that's why they're going to take her. It's the woman's touch, and she'll do it just fine.”

And she did do it just fine, I understand. It was frequently a question of just persuading her father not to see Tom, Dick and Harry all the time, on the voyage, you know.

Q:

Elliott did go, didn't he?





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