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Homestead of first woman to serve in cabinet to be preserved

Homestead of first woman to serve in cabinet to be preserved

NEWCASTLE, Maine (AP) - The historic homestead of the first woman to serve in a presidential cabinet will be preserved with the use of a $500,000 federal grant. Photo: clipart.com


NEWCASTLE, Maine (AP) – The historic homestead of the first woman to serve in a presidential cabinet will be preserved with the use of a $500,000 federal grant.

The members of the Maine Congressional delegation say the Frances Perkins Center in Newcastle will receive the money through the National Park Service’s Save America’s Treasures grant program. It will allow the center to improve the condition of the principal structures at the Frances Perkins Homestead National Historic Landmark.

Perkins was the U.S. secretary of labor from 1933 to 1945. The delegation says the Frances Perkins Center is in the midst of acquiring Perkins’ homestead and turning the property into an educational and community resource.

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