President Franklin D. Roosevelt appointed the first female cabinet-member, Frances Perkins, as US Secretary of Labor. She served from 1933-1945.
Franklin Roosevelt was the first President to appoint a woman to his cabinet. In 1933 he appointed Frances Perkins to be Secretary of Labor. (The next president to appoint a women to his cabinet was Dwight Eisenhower in 1953.)Before that, she was appointed by FDR as New York's industrial commissioner when he was still the governor. She gained much respect in as a result of leading progressive reform and championing minimum wages and unemployment insurance laws.In the United States, Frances Perkins was the first woman to serve in the Cabinet. President Franklin D. Roosevelt appointed her Secretary of Labor in 1933.
Francis Perkins (1880-1965) was the first woman in a US Cabinet, appointed as Secretary of Labor by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt on March 4, 1933. She served until June 30, 1945.
You are asking about Frances Perkins, who served as US Secretary of Labor from 1933 to 1945; she was appointed to that post by President Franklin Roosevelt. (An interesting fact about her was that she was one of the few women back then to keep her name; she was married, but always used "Frances Perkins" rather than Mrs. Paul Wilson.)
= Franklin D. Roosevelt =
The Department of Labor. President Franklin D. Roosevelt appointed Frances Perkins as Secretary of Labor in 1933, and she remained in that office until the end of his presidency in 1945.
Frances Perkins was born on April 10, 1880.
Frances Perkins Building was created in 1975.
Frances Perkins was born on April 10, 1880.
Frances Perkins had one daughter. Susannah Coggeshall.
Franklin Roosevelt named Frances Perkins Secretary of Labor in 1933. She stayed until he died, in 1945.
It was Frances Perkins (April 10, 1880 - May 14, 1965), born Fannie Coralie Perkins, was the U.S. Secretary of Labor from 1933 to 1945, and the first woman appointed to the U.S. Cabinet.
The second female cabinet appointment came from President Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1953 when he appointed Oveta Culp Hobby the Secretary of Helth, Education and Welfare. The first President to appoint a woman was Franklin Roosevelt (Labor Secretary Frances Perkins, 1933).