In today’s time, it is almost impossible to to find a building that does not have exit signs or fire extinguishers here in America. Fire drills are regularly practiced in schools and workplaces to ensure the tiniest amount of fatality would not occur. However, it wasn’t like that in the 1900’s. Neither safety issues nor regulations were taken into thought. “The waist industry was flourishing in New York: there were more than five hundred blouse factories, employing upward of forty thousand workers.” In this time of history, the Triangle Waist Company was the largest manufacturer of women’s shirtwaist in the entire country! On March 25, 1911, one hundred and forty six individuals lost their life to what was one of the biggest events in history …show more content…
The rise of big businesses such as The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory was a noticeable feature of the Gilded Age. David Von Drehle explains, “The garment industry had become quite large and began to mature, having doubled in size over the previous decade” One of the main factors in causing the fire were the terrible circumstances in factories during the Gilded Age at that time. Everyone during this time was all fighting for a better workplace and a better profit for their hard work. Drehle supports his argument in a way that describes the hardships of each individual and their background throughout the story. The fire illustrates how the safety precautions were very weak and also poorly thought out throughout this time period in history. It also describes how evil and selfish the big business owners were who treated their workers like slaves to strive for wealth. Isaac Harris and Max Blanck who were owners of the Triangle factory who demanded that their employees produce twice as many products. “It was the practice of “sweating” workers- that is, squeezing out more work for less …show more content…
The fire swept through everything in just a matter of seconds. Workers tried to flee the flames immediately, but locked doors, which prevented them from taking breaks, kept them from leaving the building and there were absolutely no fire escape routes. At the end of the disaster a total of one hundred and forty-six lives had been taken from this fire. This event exposed the corruption of the Gilded Age politics, which were controlled mainly by big business leaders. Tammany Hall was the democratic political machine and was against any Progressivist because all progressives wanted was a civil service system. David Von Drehle explains, “Tammany Hall, the political machine that had dominated New York for half of a century, represented precisely the opposite. Many Tammany leaders expressed nothing but scorn for the progressives.” New problems arose in many new reform movements and born among them was a new form of government called Progressivism. Progressives were influenced by science, had a pretty big religious belief,and were white Anglo-Saxon Protestants. “Progress had its own political movement: Progressivism, a gospel of the new and improved. Progressives supported the vote for women, protection for consumers and workers, trade unionism. More than any platform, though progressivism was a mind-set. It was a pragmatic and scientific.” Despite the fact that they tried to fix their working conditions,
The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory was a factory where blouses were made. The majority of the workers were young immigrants. On AND, a tragic fire started and spread to the 8th, 9th, and 10th floors of the factory. Firefighters searching for victim Firefighters getting coffins
The Triangle Shirtwaist Fire not only affected the city of New York, but also the rest of the country. It forever changed the way our country would look at safety regulations in factories and buildings. The fire proved to America what can and will happen if we over-look safety regulations and over-crowd buildings. Unfortunately, 146 lives are taken before we fully understand this concept.
Interfering with the actions of private business was considered taboo, and the government rarely acted upon cases out of fear and propagating socialism. The horrific and very public death of 146 men, women, and children on March 11th, 1911 shocked the nation and forced action. One can wonder what would have happened if Blanck and Harris were to have been found guilty by a jury of their peers. Would the general public have been satisfied? Would the fight for labour rights continued to be fought by organized labour groups alone? The very fact that the deaths were under no one's direct responsibility pushed the burden of guilt into the public view. The government in this instances was forced to fix weak legislation that made such an incident happen. In doing so they began a long process of breaking down the taboo which prevented government from interfering with private business operations. If firms could not be trusted to maintain the safety of their employees, the government would be forced to step in and implement such measures. The Factory Safety Commission went on to create one of the most progressive protective measures for workers, implementing 38 new laws in New York, becoming a model for the whole
Some disasters are so impactful, that they forever change the course of history. On March 25, 1911, one such event took place. The infamous Triangle Shirtwaist Fire occurred that day, and left one hundred and forty-six people dead in its wake. While many at the time thought the story would soon pass, and with it all the potential bad publicity, the story of the fire spread quickly, and outraged many people. As a result, the Triangle Shirtwaist Fire ended up changing many
While the birth of the progressive era started the support of women’s rights rapidly increased and that help promote the reform greatly. The triangle catastrophe affected the government and it gave the government a huge wakeup call like stated “ it was a crucial moment in a potent chain of events a chain that ultimately forced fundamental reforms from the political machinery of new York and after new York the whole nation ( Drehle,2004, 3).”The aftermath of the fire was a very big part of why we have automatic sprinklers, fire drills, fire extinguishers and marked exit doors that can be open easily and also why fire safety laws and fire regulations are so important and why they are enforced so
Near closing time on Saturday afternoon, March 25, 1911, in New York City a fire broke out on the top floors of the Asch Building in the Triangle Shirtwaist Company. One of the worst tragedies in American history it was know as the Triangle Shirtwaist Fire. It was a disaster that took the lives of 146 young immigrant workers. A fire that broke out in a cramped sweatshop that trapped many inside and killed 146 people.
Near closing time on Saturday afternoon, March 25, 1911, in New York City a fire broke out on the top floors of the Asch Building in the Triangle Shirtwaist Company. One of the worst tragedies in American history it is known as the “Triangle Shirtwaist Fire”. It was a disaster that took the lives of 146 workers, most of which were women. This tragedy pointed out the negatives of sweatshop conditions of the industrialization era. It emphasized the worst part of its times the low wages, long hours, and unsanitary working conditions were what symbolized what sweatshops were all about. These conditions were appalling, and no person should ever be made to work in these conditions.
Triangle, a novel written by David Von Drehle, is about the working conditions that caused “the deadliest workplace disaster in New York history [for ninety years to come]” (Drehle 3). It occurred in the early 1930’s, and about the events that led to protests for better conditions so that the incident that happened on March 25, 1911, in the Triangle Waist building, would not be replicated. Due to the inadequate working conditions, some buildings experienced disasters because “[The] workplace safety was scarcely regulated, and workers’ compensation was considered newfangled or even socialist” (Drehle 3). Most who lost their lives that unfaithful day at the Triangle building, were taken to the pier, “the makeshift morgue at the end of the pier
Life in the early 1900’s wasn’t easy. Competition for jobs was at an all time high, especially in New York City. Immigrants were flooding in and needed to find work fast, even if that meant in the hot, overcrowded conditions of garment factories. Conditions were horrid and disaster was inevitable, and disaster did strike in March, 1911. The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory in New York set on fire, killing 146 workers. This is an important event in US history because it helped accomplish the tasks unions and strikes had tried to accomplish years earlier, It improved working conditions in factories nationwide and set new safety laws and regulations so that nothing as catastrophic would happen again. The workplace struggles became public after
Frances Perkins came from a wealthy family in Maine. From her mother, she inherited the propensity to be stingy with money, earnest, and brutally honest. In 1902, she attended Mount Holyoke College, where she used her glibness to barely get by. Instead of focusing on improving her strengths, Frances’ professors sought to improve her weaknesses; Especially her moral ones. This was done with the idea in mind that if she were to overcome her shortcomings, she would be able to conquer anything life threw at her. After graduation, Frances struggled to find something meaningful to do with her life; That is the tragedy of The
their possessions in to the street. Both the west and south side were cover in
“The ‘Triangle’ company, “With blood this name will be written in the history of the American workers’ movement, and with feeling will this history recall the names of the strikers of this shop- of the crusaders” (Von Drehle 86). Even before it happen, the Forward predicted the terrible disaster of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory that occurred one year, one month, and seventeen days later (86). Triangle: The Fire that Changed America, by David Von Drehle tells the story of the horrible fire.
The 146 deaths caused by the Triangle fire were not looked over. This fire is said to be one that changed America because that is exactly what it did. The work done the following year created a series of new laws in the 1913 legislation that was “unmatched to that time in American history.” (Von Drehle 215) The Tammany Twins, Robert Wagner in Senate and Al Smith in the Assembly, completely recast the labor law of the nation’s largest state by pushing through twenty-five bills. Laws such as mandatory fire drills in large shops, unlocked doors that swing outwards, and automatic sprinklers in high rise buildings, were enforced by the Factory Commissions push through of a “complete reorganization of the state Department of Labor.” (Von Drehle 215)
After the fire, people had opened their eyes to workplace safety. This fire angered many citizens and felt that something needed to be done about it. As time went on, more people had recognized this issue. Workplace safety was improved, just by adding exits, fire drills, fire alarms, and working, steady fire escapes. The whole
On the afternoon of March 25, 1911, a fire broke out in the 10-floor Asch Building, a block east of Manhattan's Washington Square. This is where 500 mostly young immigrant girls were producing shirts for the Triangle Shirtwaist Company. Within minutes, it spread to consume the building's upper three stories. Firemen at the scene were unable to rescue those trapped inside: their ladders weren't tall enough. Exits were locked, and the narrow fire escapes were inadequate. Panicked, many jumped from the windows to their deaths. People on the street watched in horror. The flames were under control in less than a half hour, but 146 people perished, 123 of them women. It was the worst disaster in the city's history.