Hundred’s of parents and family members came to identify their lost loved ones. 146 employees of the Triangle Shirtwaist Company were dead the night of March 25‚ 1911. The horror of their deaths led to numerous changes in occupational safety standards that currently ensure the safety of workers today. At the time of the fire the only safety measures available for the workers were 27 buckets of water and a fire escape that would collapse when people tried to use them. Most of the doors were locked and those
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History II In 1911‚ a deadliest fire occurred in the triangle waist company killing hundreds of people. The workers at the Triangle Waist Company went on strike in 1909 to bring awareness to people about the company .The Women’s Trade Union League played a big role before and during the strike. The strike made an impact but it wasn’t enough to open the eyes of the owners of the triangle factory. Later a fire arose changing labor and industry forever. The Triangle waist company consisted of women
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I watched is “Triangle Fire” it was made February 28‚ 2011 about the massive Triangle Shirtwaist Fire of 1911 that killed 146 people. The thesis of this film is mainly taking a look into the working lives of immigrants in the early 1900’s. The filmmaker’s agenda was apparent in this film and it was to expose the working conditions‚ and lives of these workers at the time to ensure the viewer would know the corruption that was at hand with the private industry of American factories. This film wanted
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The Triangle Fire of 1911 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
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Published in 2004 by Gover Atlantic Inc‚ David Von Brehle wrote Triangle: The Fire That Changed America that recounted that fateful day at the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory on March 26‚ 1911. Von Brehle portrayed not only the horrors of the trapped workers in the factory but also included the poor state of worker’s safety and low wages. Von Brehle’s purpose of writing about the Triangle disaster is to inform readers that factory conditions in the late nineteenth century and early twentieth century
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with a number of other girls‚ was in the dressing room on the eighth floor of the Asch Building‚ in Washington Place‚ at 4.40 o’clock on the afternoon of Saturday‚ March 25‚ when I heard somebody cry ‘Fire!’” Unlike those on the ninth and tenth floors (the other two floors that our factory‚ the Triangle Waist Company‚ occupied)‚ I did not climb out of exterior windows in desperation; I was kindly shown to a window in a crash door that I could fit through in order to climb downstairs. Instead of passing
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The event of the fire was exceedingly devastating chiefly caused by the extreme lack of fire safety in the era. To begin with‚ the materials used in making the shirtwaists were highly flammable in themselves. When the scraps from the garments and their patterns were piled in large bins‚ the perfect environment for igniting and fueling a fire was created‚ as detailed in the book‚ “Those airy scraps of sheer fabric and tissue paper‚ loosely heaped and full of oxygen‚ amounted to a virtual firebomb”
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The Triangle Fire was a horrible event which caused deaths of workers who were working at the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory. This factory was a sweatshop. A sweatshop was a place where people worked for long hours with low pay‚ and they worked in very poor conditions. People who worked here were there for the money that they needed. They were immigrants‚ young women‚ and children. They may have been doing this to support their family. Poor conditions and a few other things caused many deaths in this
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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 business and political practices of the time. In his book Triangle: The Fire that Changed America‚ David von Drehle argues that the fire largely impacted
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Introduction The triangle fire disaster in 1911 was the opening for United States to consider fire safety measures in the country. After the incidence‚ New York City‚ where the fire started‚ tighten up their laws to not only ensure fire safety but also lead to various labour laws including strict child labour‚ worker’s right‚ and sanitation issues. Records suggest their employers did not properly compensate majority of workers at that time while they also allow individuals too young to work as
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