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Portrait Artist: Jean MacLane |
Tenure: March 4, 1933 to June 30, 1945
From Massachusetts; graduate of Mount Holyoke College.
Trained as a social worker, worked in settlement houses in Chicago (Hull House)
and Philadelphia, and was involved in the reform efforts spawned by the tragic
Triangle Shirtwaist Co. Fire in New York City. She was the first woman
Industrial Commissioner under New York Governor Franklin Roosevelt; held other
important labor related jobs in the New York state government under Governors
Roosevelt and Al Smith.
Appointed by Roosevelt; was the first woman Cabinet member.
Led the battle against the Great Depression: the Wagner-Peyser Act revitalized
the U.S. Employment Service, the Fair Labor Standards Act set a floor under
wages and a ceiling over hours, the Wagner Act protected workers' right to
organize. She established the Labor Standards Bureau. Through effective
relationships with the state governments, she strengthened labor law
enforcement by the states. She was also the principal architect of the Social
Security Act.
Served 12 years, 3 months (longer than any other
Secretary). Went on to serve as a Member of the Civil Service Commission.
Department of Labor Headquarters named after her in 1980. Inducted into the
Labor Hall of Fame in 1988.
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