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      • Discontent over wages and working conditions at Triangle and the city’s other garment factories led tens of thousands of workers to strike in 1909, seeking concessions such as a 20 percent pay hike and a 52-hour week, as well as safer working conditions. Most of the factory owners quickly settled, but Triangle’s owners resisted the demands.
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  1. Apr 1, 2021 · The Triangle Fire of March 25, 1911, destroyed hundreds of lives — both those who died and their families. Sadly, it required the ashes of 146 people to redesign and reimagine the workplace of...

    • Dr. Howard Markel
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    • Deplorable Working Conditions
    • Triangle Factory's Fire Safety: Empty Water Buckets
    • New Yorkers Demand Reform
    • Reform Agenda Empowers FDR's New Deal

    The fire, says Paul F. Cole, director of theAmerican Labor Studies Center, “awakened a nation to the dangerous and deplorable conditions that many workers faced on a daily basis.” The disaster’s causes were complex. In the early 1890s, immigrants from Italy and eastern Europe came to the United States in search of a better life, but instead often f...

    On the afternoon of March 25, a Saturday, 500 people were working in Triangle’s factory, which occupied three floors in a building that had been built just 10 years before. Court testimony later placed the blame for the blaze on a fire that started in a fabric scrap bin on the eighth floor, which probably was ignited by adiscarded cigarette, shortl...

    A week after the fire, New Yorkers packed an emergency meeting at the Metropolitan Opera House to call for action on fire safety. A few days later, an estimated 350,000 people joined in a massive funeral procession for the fire’s victims. The factory’s owners, Isaac Harris and Max Blanck, were put on trial for manslaughter but werefound not guilty ...

    Additionally, the fire helped unite organized labor and various reform-minded politicians, including progressive New York GovernorAlfred E. Smith and SenatorRobert F. Wagner, one of the legislative architects of President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal agenda.Frances Perkins, who served on a committee that helped to set up the FIC, would later be...

  3. Mar 25, 2021 · One hundred and ten years ago, the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire changed the course of worker safety in the U.S. Since then, we have helped transform America’s workplaces to ensure safe and healthful working conditions.

  4. May 27, 2021 · The Triangle Waist Company fire of 1911 killed 146 workers, most of whom were immigrant women. The tragic event was a catalyst for the National Labor Relations Act of 1935, which gave...

    • 9 min
  5. Mar 25, 2020 · The 1911 Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire—which killed 146 garment workers—shocked the public and galvanized the labor movement. Fire hoses spray the upper floors of the Asch...

  6. Dec 2, 2009 · On March 25, 1911, the Triangle Shirtwaist Company factory in New York City burned, killing 146 workers. It is remembered as one of the most infamous incidents in American industrial...

  7. Mar 21, 2011 · The 100th anniversary of the Triangle shirtwaist factory fire, which killed 146 workers in a New York City garment factory, marks a century of reforms that make up the core of OSHA's mission.

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