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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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so many things that are the common property of every third-rate American boy. He didn't get education, and he didn't get a very good education until he married his wife, who was a school-teacher who taught in one of these towns where he was a miner.

They met. She appreciated him. The tenderness and devotion which he had for his wife, which was very real and very substantial, was largely--you could see it, almost--it was the response which he made to the first person who had ever really appreciated him. It still further bolstered his pride, really--the fact that this charming, pleasant American woman of the first families of Virginia inheritance appreciated him. Appreciated his mind, appreciated his drive, appreciated his abilities, and apparently had so indicated to him, you see, at the time.

It has been said that she taught him to read, but she didn't teach him to read. I mean, he knew how to read and write before that. But she greatly assisted him in the development of his further education beyond what he had had in the poorest kind of common schools up to ten or eleven years old.

Interviewer:

You really feel that this is a good marriage?

Perkins:

Well, I don't know about that. No, I don't know anything about it. I never even tried to estimate it.





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