Financial History 134 (Summer 2020) | Page 26

or paying Black workers disastrously low wages. He also discovered that racial bias ran rife throughout the New Deal. New Deal discrimination was increasingly institutionalizing racist practices into programs and policies at the federal level, and Foreman embraced the fight to end it as his personal mission. One of his first acts was to decline to accept a secretary from the all-white federal pool and demand that Ickes allow him to hire an African American woman. The interior secretary agreed and said he knew just the right person—a fellow Chicagoan, Lucia Mae Pitts. Besides being a top-notch secretary, Pitts brought to the special adviser’s office the much-needed perspective of a Black woman. After completing her secretarial degree, Pitts worked for the Tuskegee Institute, a New York theater, Atlanta’s African American newspaper syndicate and the Federal Council of Churches. In the early 1930s, she landed a job in the Illinois House of Representatives’ stenographic pool. The pool’s only African American secretary, Pitts endured the frigidity of her white coworkers and elected officials. But one figure welcomed her, Anna Wilmarth Ickes, a representative from Winnetka, IL, and the wife of Harold Ickes, who was then a crusading local reformer. When Foreman came calling, Pitts had fallen victim to the state of Illinois’s Depression-era layoffs. She jumped at his offer and headed to Washington. On September 5, 1933 she became the first African American woman to serve as a secretary to a white federal administrator at the capital. Pitts was eager to work but she refused to be flattered and, like other African Americans, harbored serious reservations about Foreman. At the beginning, she maintained a cool, yet professional distance from her new boss. Foreman later described her attitude as “rude,” while she characterized it as “unbending.” Pitts remembered the New Deal’s formative period as “hectic and busy.” Relief and recovery programs were organized and reorganized rapidly. Some were housed within preexisting divisions in cabinet departments; others were new, independent agencies whose purpose required oversight from one or more cabinet secretaries. There was competition among programs and cabinet secretaries, especially for funding. But all those serving in the New Deal realized the seriousness of President Franklin D. Roosevelt greets scientist and inventor George Washington Carver with a handshake during his second term of office, at a time when whites generally refused to shake hands with African Americans. their charge; they were there to rescue the nation from economic catastrophe. Foreman had already rushed into battle. He spent long days trying to pressure cabinet officials and New Deal heads to appoint African Americans to their divisions. The iciness between Pitts and Foreman quickly thawed, as she became convinced of his sincerity. He spent long hours in the office receiving individuals and delegations asking for help for themselves or economically devastated Black communities. Pitts not only witnessed but also contributed to the expansion of African American federal appointments, as Foreman sought her recommendations for expanding the Black secretarial corps. He also immediately added “field representative” to her list of duties and dispatched her to Virginia Beach to survey the damage from a deadly hurricane that had left numerous Black families homeless. While Foreman may have earned Pitts’s respect, he still had a long way to go with the Black public. He knew that with each passing day, African Americans were tumbling deeper into economic despair. He tenaciously charged ahead pushing for jobs and resources for Black citizens. He aggressively buttonholed Roosevelt’s cabinet heads and became an unwelcome figure in cabinet and New Deal offices. Foreman eventually stumbled onto one official willing to hear him out, Secretary of Commerce Daniel C. Roper. A fellow southerner, Roper was eager to do damage control on race relations. The Commerce Department was a major player in the National Recovery Administration, and Roper had taken much of the heat for that program’s bigoted practices. Roper had compounded his problems by dismissing a respected African American appointee, a Republican holdover who advised the department on Black-owned businesses. Then he made an unpopular decision even worse by abolishing that position. African Americans demanded the secretary restore the post and either rehire its previous occupant or find a replacement. So, when Foreman came calling in the late summer, Roper seized the chance to fix his public image. At Foreman’s suggestion, Roper agreed to sponsor a conference on the economic Hulton Deutsch 24 FINANCIAL HISTORY | Summer 2020 | www.MoAF.org