MOTIVATING TIPS

Frances Perkins

1880 – 1965 · American labor reformer and Cabinet secretary

1 verified quote1 topicAll with editorial commentary

[ Life ]

Born in Boston in 1880, Frances Perkins became the first woman to hold a Cabinet position when Franklin D. Roosevelt appointed her Secretary of Labor in 1933—a post she held for twelve years, longer than any successor. She witnessed the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire in 1911 from the street below, watching 146 workers, mostly young immigrant women, perish in locked exits. That moment calcified her commitment to worker protection. A Quaker and Mount Holyoke graduate, she moved through Progressive Era reform circles before landing at the New York Department of Labor under Al Smith, where she documented factory conditions with the precision of an investigator.

[ Words & Works ]

Perkins authored *The Roosevelt I Knew* (1946), a firsthand account of FDR's inner circle, and her speeches on the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938—which established the 40-hour work week and abolished child labor—remain her clearest articulations of dignity through regulation. Her insistence that work should never consume the whole human being sounds almost radical now. She died in 1965, having proven that moral clarity and administrative competence need not be strangers.

Frequently asked

What are the best Frances Perkins quotes?

Frances Perkins is best known for quotes on On the Working Life. Among the most cited: "I never took a position because..." from The Roosevelt I Knew.

How many Frances Perkins quotes does MotivatingTips have?

MotivatingTips has 1 verified Frances Perkins quote, each with editorial commentary and source verification. Quotes are organized across On the Working Life.

What book are Frances Perkins's quotes from?

Quotes on MotivatingTips are sourced from The Roosevelt I Knew.

Are these Frances Perkins quotes verified?

Every Frances Perkins quote on MotivatingTips includes verified attribution with source, book, chapter, or speech reference where available.

Best Frances Perkins Quotes

Hand-picked, verified, and explained.

I never took a position because I thought it was politically wise. I took a position because I thought it was right.

VerifiedThe Roosevelt I Knew, Chapter 14, Viking Press, 1946
Why This Matters

The real force here lies in what Perkins *didn't* say—she didn't claim righteousness makes you popular or that doing right always wins out. She's describing something harder: the daily choice to ignore the political calculation entirely, to stop mentally rehearsing how a decision will play in the press or with your allies. As the first female Cabinet secretary, she pushed for Social Security and workplace safety rules when both were deeply unpopular with powerful interests, accepting that her career might end for it. That distinction between being right and being vindicated matters most to anyone who's ever watched a colleague stay silent in a meeting, not from cowardice exactly, but from the exhausting habit of wondering how their words will be received.

Read full quote →
Frances Perkins quotes by topic

Works cited

Authors you might also like

Cite This Page

Use the following citations to reference this page in academic or professional work.

APA Style

Frances Perkins Quotes. (n.d.). MotivatingTips. Retrieved May 8, 2026, from https://www.motivatingtips.com/authors/frances-perkins

Chicago Style

Frances Perkins Quotes. MotivatingTips, DSS Media, 2026. https://www.motivatingtips.com/authors/frances-perkins, accessed May 8, 2026.

MLA Style

"Frances Perkins Quotes." MotivatingTips. DSS Media, 2026. 8 May 2026. https://www.motivatingtips.com/authors/frances-perkins

By Email

One quote. Every morning. No fluff.

Join 100,000+ readers who start their day with a carefully chosen quote and brief reflection. Unsubscribe anytime.

By WhatsApp

Same quote. On WhatsApp. Reply and it talks back.

Get your daily quote delivered to WhatsApp. Ask questions, get related quotes, or just reply to share your thoughts.

Open in WhatsApp