
Throughout her life, Esther Peterson has been a powerful and effective catalyst
for change - for the labor movement, the women's movement and the consumer
movement.
Peterson joined the staff of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers in the late l930s
and later became the effective legislative representative of the AFL-CIO's
Industrial Union Department. In 1961, she had her pick of positions in the
Kennedy Administration and chose to head the Women's Bureau in the Department of
Labor. As Assistant Secretary of Labor, she achieved the creation of the first
presidential commission on women, headed initially by Eleanor Roosevelt. This
pioneering group for the first time focused federal attention on the status and
condition of women in the workplace.
Peterson served Presidents Johnson and Carter as adviser in consumer affairs.
She continues to work actively in international affairs. On the occasion of her
honoring by Radcliffe College Peterson said, "We have a tremendous
responsibility to future generations to leave an accurate record of our history,
one which lays bare not only the facts, but the process of change."
Additional Resources:
Ambrose, Susan A. Journeys of Women in Science and Engineering: No Universal
Constants. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1997. NOTES: "Labor and
Social Change" series.
Restless: The Memoirs of Labor and Consumer Activist Esther Peterson
Washington, D.C.: Caring Pub., 1995.
Oral History Interview, Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America. By Martha Ross.
Sanford, North Carolins: Microfilming Corporation of America, 1978.
Correspondence 1963, 1 reel on microfilm. John F. Kennedy Library. Boston,
Massachusetts.
Papers and Additions 1910-1984. Radcliffe College, The Arthur & Elizabeth
Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America. Cambridge,
Massachusetts.