The
The
The Triangle Factory Fire Trial: Blanck and Harris go Free After the devastating Triangle Waist Company fire, 146 workers out of the 500 working that day perished in the raging fire. Workers died left and right due to panic, confusion, and chaos. Max Blanck and Isaac Harris were blamed for the deaths of the many workers. Many people believed that they locked doors and that their fire safety precautions were almost nonexistent. They were taken to court on charges of manslaughter and were found not guilty of murder, but guilty of manslaughter (Christianson).…
On March 25th at 4:45 pm in the Triangle factory when all the women workers were locked in their rooms and working the fire start on the eighteenth floor. When the fire happened all of these young girls was trying to exit the building because all the exit was close they did not have the way to get…
Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire Carlos Gonzalez Prof. Ursic 22 April 2024 Abstract The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire of 1911 perfectly shows the aftershocks of labor exploitation, ignorance of factory safety. Such as a lack of sprinklers, and a lack of any fire resistant materials. There was a lack of safety exits, as the majority of the doors were locked. It is unknown how the fire started, but there are assumptions that it started with a lit cigarette.…
The tragedy that was the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire (Triangle Fire) could be attributed to a plethora of cumulative factors that brought about the deaths of numerous factory workers. The event referred to as, “The Fire That Changed America” (Argersinger 1), occurred just a short time after the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory strike (Triangle Strike), which addressed the horrific conditions faced by the factory workers and their right to unionize; and confirmed the claims of the Triangle Strike women workers. Despite factory owners across New York City giving into the demands of the factory workers right to unionize, have higher wages, and less hours; resulting in the strikes ending, the triangle shirtwaist factory owners abstained from coming…
Until the World Trade Center tragedy in 2001, the Triangle Shirtwaist Fire remained the deadliest workplace incident in U.S. history claiming the lives of 146 women and young girls on March 25, 1911. Greed, paranoia, and dominance ruled the factory owners who wanted more money for themselves without the regard for the laborers that worked long hours for little pay in the worst conditions possible. The textile factory was located on the 8th floor of a high rise building, it had two exits and a fires escape. However, the owners, Harris and Blanck, only allowed for one exit out of the factory, it was demanded the other exit remained locked. The owners feared union representatives would enter and convince the women they deserved better working…
This gave a nine member team the power to investigate and create law that would allow safer working conditions. Without the fire happening to the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory conditions for factory would have not started to change as soon as they did, though it did take a…
Reviewed by Khurshid Ahmad Qureshi Triangle: The Fire That Changed America, written by David Von Drehle, recounts the dreadful incident of fire that broke out in the Triangle Shirtwaist factory on March 25, 1911, and its aftermath. In the earlier part of nineteenth-century, New York City saw Triangle Shirtwaist factory running a lucrative business in a multi-story building. The factory was owned by two businessmen Isaac Harris and Max Blank who decided to set it up on the upper three stories of the Asch Building; which was considered and projected as…
The Tringale Fire The happenings in The Triangle Fire occurred during the beginning of the 1990’s. It was one of the worst and deadest accidents that happened in history. Set in New York during times that were difficult and having just one job was sometimes not enough. The women that were in this were struggling with having money for their families and being out in strikes was a danger for them, because they could lose their jobs.…
In a nutshell the reaction to the Triangle fire in the city, state, and nation would equate to shock, unification, and reform. Initially, during the fire there was a great ton of shock and numbness. Citizens on the streets watched as their young daughters, sisters, and future wives jump to their deaths. Afterwards, the same onlookers had to painfully watch as 146 lifeless bodies were brought onto the streets, hoping it wasn’t a loved one. Yellow journalism was in full affect with the use of colorful words to describe how bodies fell from the sky as well as printing photos of weeping loved ones after funeral sessions.…
Panic set in and it just continued to be a downward spiral after that. After the confirmation of the 2 missing firemen, Firefighters who responded both to the first and third alarm were ordered to conduct a search and resource operations for firemen 1 and 2. Needless to say, this effort did more damage then it did good, in efforts to find firemen #1 and #2 4 more firemen became lost within the dark hell like clouds of this fire, the smoke became to much to bare, and firemen 3 and 4 became disoriented and could not find their way out of the…
“Flesh and Blood so Cheap,” by Albert Marrin, is a non-fiction narrative that explains the devastating fire in a New York sweatshop that ended the lives of 146 workers. Though it has never been proven, some hypothesize that the fire started as a result of a cigarette bud or an ash. Most employees made it out, but people in the ninth floor “were not as lucky.” Due to poor work conditions, some employees were forced to jump out the building, or burn. The calamitous Triangle Fire proved that it is essential for the government to vital decisions in order to protect the safety and health of employees.…
“The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire” by Donna Getzinger is similar to Von Drehle’s monograph in that it discusses the history of the workers before and after the fire, the safety laws put into place after the fire, the…
The monograph “Triangle The Fire That Changed America” by David Von Drehle is a brief history on the The Triangle Waist Company that burned down in March 25, 1911 claiming many lives of The Triangle Waist Company. Drehle profession lays in journalism where he studied in the University of Oxford and also at the University of Denver where he got a masters in Literature as a Marshall Scholar. With the fire at The Triangle Waist Company issues arose that the fire was indeed a crucial moment in American history that forced fundamental reforms from the political machinery of New York and the whole nation. The importance of the aftermath of the fire throughout the Progressive movement was that it finally allowed change to happen in…
(Bread and Roses article)The Triangle Shirtwaist fire showed how terrible conditions were, which caused people to start wanting improvements. On the other hand, The Homestead strikers were not so fortunate. It ended with Carnegie slashing wages,(again) cutting 500 jobs, and proposing a new 12 hour workday. The steel workers believed that they pretty much…
The fire was the deadliest disaster in New York history until 2001 (Von Drehle, 2003, p.3). Workplace accidents were commonplace, so that part was not surprising as there were no strict regulations for workplace safety at that time. He made the case that it was so compelling and pivotal because of the influx of immigrants, the rise of progressivism, chains of unanswered disasters, and strikes which were resisted. The Triangle factory was at the heart of one of those strikes, and the owners of the Triangle led the movement of manufacturers to resist the strikes. A year later, the Triangle went up in flames.…