the owners had locked doors to control workers' breaks
In 1911, there was a factory that made shirtwaists in New York City. A shirtwaist was a kind of woman's blouse. The name of the company was the Triangle Shirtwaist Company, so their factory was called the Triangle Shirtwaist factory. In March 1911, there was a disastrous fire in the factory and 146 employees, most young women, died in the fire or jumped to their deaths to avoid the fire. That factory fire came to be called the Triangle Shirtwaist Fire or the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire.
The owners had locked doors to control workers' breaks.
The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire.
The owners had locked doors to control workers' breaks.
141 people died in the Triange Shirtwaist Company factory fire, 125 of which were mere girls. The deaths were caused by the locked exit stairways.
no proper fire escape , panic and large piles of material which were an excellerant.
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.
There were several reasons, all working together, for the deaths of the 146 women and girls in the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory. They were not informed in a timely manner that there was a fire, many of the exit doors were locked, the fire escapes could not handle the load of people trying to use them, and the fire department equipment was unable to reach the fire floors from the street.
The owners had locked the doors to control workerss' breaks
Tthe Triangle Shirtwaist Company was a clothing manufacturer, located on several upper floors of a building in Greenwich Village in New York City. When a fire began, there were no automatic sprinklers, no extinguishers, and doors to exits were locked . A large number of employees, mostly young women, died- either from the fire, or jumping to their deaths.
The public was shocked and outraged by the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire. It resulted in the deaths of 146 garment workers, most of whom were young immigrant women. This tragedy shed light on the terrible working conditions and lack of safety regulations in the garment industry, leading to widespread public demand for workplace reforms and stronger labor protections.
The ILGWU had already been in existence, but attention was focused on the demands of workers by the fire in the Triangle Shirtwaist factory, where more than 100 young women died, either in the fire or by jumping to the deaths.