Broadcast Marks 100th Anniversary of the Tragic Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire, New York’s Worst Workplace
Disaster until 9/11.
On March 25th, 1911, a deadly fire broke out in the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory in New York’s Greenwich Village.
The blaze ripped through the congested loft as petrified workers -- mostly young immigrant women -- desperately tried to make
their way downstairs. One door was blocked by fire and the other had been locked by the factory owners to prevent theft. Some
workers managed to cram onto the elevator while others ran down an inadequate fire escape which soon pulled away from the masonry
and sent them to their deaths. Hundreds of horrified onlookers arrived just in time to see young men and women jumping from the
windows, framed by flames. By the time the fire burned itself out, 146 people were dead. All but 23 of the dead were women and
nearly half were teenagers.
Triangle Fire,
the harrowing story of an event that changed labor laws forever, will premiere on
AMERICAN EXPERIENCE Monday, Feb. 28
at 8:00 p.m. The film is directed and produced by Jamila Wignot (Walt Whitman, The Rehnquist Revolution), and narrated by Michael Murphy.
The workers in the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory were among the more than 100,000 New Yorkers who toiled in the city’s
garment factories at the time. They came from countries like Italy, Russia, and Poland for America’s promise of a better future and,
all around them, they saw the riches promised by the American Dream. New York was at the peak of its Gilded Age and the Triangle
Shirtwaist Factory was just a short stroll from the limestone mansions of millionaires and the elegant shops of the famed Ladies Mile.
Two men who had achieved the dream were the wealthy owners of the thriving Triangle factory, Isaac Harris and Max Blanck, tailors
who had arrived from the shtetls of Eastern Europe only twenty years earlier.
The dream seemed a long way off for the young workers at the factory who worked 14-hour days for two dollars a day.
Less than three years before the deadly fire, New York’s garment workers had begun agitating for shorter hours, better pay, safer
shops and unions. To the horror of Harris and Blanck, the young women of the Triangle factory joined the crusade and called for a
strike, becoming leaders in what was then the largest single work stoppage in the city’s history. Within 48 hours, 70 of the smallest
factories gave in to their workers’ demands but the Triangle bosses organized other owners and refused to surrender, paying
prostitutes and police to beat the strikers. Their terrible treatment brought the women an unexpected ally. Anne Morgan, the daughter
of J.P. Morgan, and many of her powerful suffragist friends -- the so-called “mink brigade” -- took up their cause and the press and
public began to rally to the plight of the brave young seamstresses.
Realizing they had no choice but to negotiate, the Triangle owners finally agreed to higher wages and shorter hours.
But they drew the line at a union. Back on the job, the Triangle workers still lacked real power to improve the worst conditions
of the factory floor: inadequate ventilation, lack of safety precautions and fire drills -- and locked doors. It took the tragedy of
the fire and the ensuing public outrage to force government action. The landmark legislation that followed gave New Yorkers the most
comprehensive workplace safety laws in the country and became a model for the nation.
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For further information contact Linda Miller, WTVP Vice President of
Programming,
at (309) 495-0591 or linda.miller@wtvp.org