The Triangle Factory Fire took place on March 25, 1911. It made history by being the most deadly workplace fire to have ever occured in New York. The flames that attacked the top three floors of the Asch building killed 176 people. Families were left devastated and citizens were horrified. Most of the people that worked in that building were immigrants. They moved from another country, many wanting a better life. What was life actually like for the brave people who sailed across the ocean, hoping…
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The Triangle Factory Fire Is the poor working conditions a reason more people didn’t survive? Why were there no fire drills? If there were fire drills, better working conditions, and no fire hazards in that shirtwaist building, could the fire been prevented? No one knows what caused the fire, but, could this be the cause of the traumatic fire? There were many dreadful fire hazards. Such as, lawn material that burned as easy as gasoline. The lawn was 120 layers thick. That is 120 layers of material…
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government sought to rebuild the South under Reconstruction while simultaneously undergoing change in the northern states with the rise of industry and factory labor. American society was on its way to becoming a superpower of industry, and with the rise of the Gilded Age, that transformation materialized. While it was landowning farmers…
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many accounts of the horrific Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire, which rocked the nation in 1900 by revealing just how unsafe working conditions were in the factories and resulting in the creation of new workplace laws to keep workers safe. The workers of the factory had gone on strike only a few years prior, and anti-unionist owners Max Blanck…
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Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire happened on March 25,1911, resulting 145 dead. The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory was owned by Isaac Harris and Max Blanck. 100,000 women and men, were hired to work 14 hours for two dollars a day. Workers weren’t allowed any breaks, they had make 3,000 stiches without no mistakes. On March 25, 1911, the fire on eighth floor starts due to a cigarette. Workers weren’t alerted, they couldn’t use the fire escape due to being over burned. The elevator only held 12 people…
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Triangle Shirtwaist Fire Cigarette “It was not… a woman’s fancy that drove them to it, but an eruption of a long-smoldering volcano, an overflow of suffering, abuse and exhaustion,” revealed Theresa Serber Makliel. The Triangle Shirtwaist Fire was an extremely tragic event in history. I was the cigarette that started it all. I caused the deaths of 150 workers. This is a long story, so let me start from the beginning. It all began on a sweltering, summer day when a woman walked into the store where…
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the worst tragic fires took place in the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory, also known a the Ash building, in New York City on March 25, 1911. Owners and employees never found out what exactly started the fire on the 8th floor, but there is many ways the fire could have started. The fire safety wasn’t very good, things on the 8th floor were wrongly placed. The fire started at about 4:40 pm while workers were getting ready to leave to go home to their families for the week. This fire caused new laws to…
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In New York City, Massachusetts on March 25, 1911, 4:40 PM (Eastern Time) a fire broke lose, the predicted cause was a burning cigarette, in the Asch Building. The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire was the deadliest industrial disaster in the history of the city, and one of the deadliest in US history. The fire caused the deaths of 146 garment workers, 123 women and 23 men, who died from the fire, smoke inhalation, or falling or jumping to their deaths. There was 71 people with injuries. Most of the…
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The detrimental Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire is considered to be one of the most tragic disasters in history. On March 25th, 1911, a fire broke out and killed 146 garment workers who were mostly women. These women worked countless hours with low wages and inhumane working conditions in a factory. Even though this event was tragic, the triangle shirtwaist fire helped to shape the new world for the better. The multitude of workers trapped within the inferno to their demise was the final straw for…
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The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire, which happened in New York City on March 25, 1911, had a significant effect on society at the time and still has an impact on laws governing worker rights and workplace safety today. The incident brought to light the hazardous working conditions and dearth of safety precautions in factories during the early 20th century, taking the lives of 146 garment workers, the most of whom were young immigrant women. Public outrage and demands for stricter workplace safety…
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