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Yes, many people survived the Triangle Shirtwaist factory fire. It was notorious because so many others did not survive.
The doors were locked in the Triangle Shirtwaist factory because the owners wanted to prevent employees leaving early or taking unauthorized breaks.
The climax of the Triangle Shirtwaist factory fire is people dying in a fire because they could not escape the fire area.
The factory, on upper floors of a high rise building, was destroyed by fire, in part because it was not equipped with sprinklers, and because it held lots of flammable materials. The building, however, was not severely damaged.
The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire probably happened because someone threw a cigarette butt into a waste can containing cloth scraps. The deaths happened because there was not a good fire alarm system, most exit doors were locked to prevent early departure from the workplace, and the fire department did not have equipment that could reach to the level where the factory, and the fire, was in the building.
Some of the laws that the Triangle Shirtwaist Fire led the workplace to enforce are better building access, fireproofing, availability of fire extinguishers, installation of alarm systems and automatic sprinklers, better conditions for workers, and limited hours for women and children as well as others.
The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire of 1911; 146 workers, mostly young women, died because they could not get out of the building or had to jump from high factory windows.
safer condition for factory workers
The climax of this story is when the workers died in the fire because they could not leave escape the fire area.
The ILGWU (International Ladies Garment Workers Union did not exist at the time of the Triangle Shirtwaist fire. The union was the LGWU (Ladies Garment Workers Union). It grew because of the fire.
Because the doors to the stairwell were locked.
Several dozen employees of Triangle Shirtwaist, all women and mostly young, died in a fire there, partly because the doors were locked (to prevent employees from leaving early). The result was legislation requiring various safety measures in factories.