Admirer and Scholar of Frances Perkins
In four days I preserved boxes of letters and this project became my honors thesis on the efforts of Frances Perkins to aid refugees.
Rebecca Brenner ’15, Archival Intern
Major: History and Philosophy
Awards: Almara Grant
Advanced Degrees: currently pursuing MA in Public History
Internship sponsor:
As the first ³ÉÈËÊÓƵintern for the Frances Perkins Center, my 2014 summer project was to organize the extensive research of author Kirstin Downey for donation to the ³ÉÈËÊÓƵArchives & Special Collections.
My internship was often confusing to explain because my organization was the Frances Perkins Center in Maine, my supervisor was Leslie Fields in the ³ÉÈËÊÓƵarchives, and my work location was Kirstin Downey’s home in Old Town Alexandria, Virginia. As I arranged and logged a dozen boxes of archival documents, Kirstin Downey often discussed with me her research that went into The Woman Behind the New Deal. She mentioned that there was a series of overflowing folders of Perkins’ refugee correspondence at the .
In the fall of 2014, I began an independent study on Frances Perkins’ refugee policy. I received an Almara grant from the history department to visit the National Archives at College Park during fall break. I photocopied as many letters as possible in four days, and it took several months to read through most of them thoroughly. I discovered that Perkins, who wanted so much to help refugees from Nazi Germany, realized her limits over the course of the 1930s.
This project became my honors thesis () on the efforts of Frances Perkins to aid refugees from Nazi Germany. I learned not only about the topic, but also about drawing conclusions from archival research. Lifelong friendships formed among the History thesis writers, as we all persisted to transform research into narrative. I am currently writing more about Perkins’ refugee policy as part of my 2015 summer internship in the .