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Locked Doors of the Triangle Factory

Episode 5409 Published 3 weeks, 3 days ago
Description
On March 25, 1911, a fire broke out on the eighth floor of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory in New York City. Within eighteen minutes, one hundred and forty-six workers were dead, most of them young immigrant women. The tragedy was not caused by the fire itself but by the locked doors, blocked stairways, and nonexistent safety measures that turned a manageable blaze into a death trap. The Triangle fire became the single most important catalyst for workplace safety reform in American history. The workers at the Triangle factory were overwhelmingly young Jewish and Italian immigrant women, some as young as fourteen, who labored ten or more hours a day in cramped conditions for poverty wages. The factory owners had deliberately locked the exit doors to prevent workers from taking unauthorized breaks or stealing scraps of fabric, a common practice in the garment industry that regulators had repeatedly failed to address. When the fire erupted, workers on the upper floors found themselves trapped. The single fire escape collapsed under the weight of fleeing workers, sending bodies plunging to the sidewalk below. The stairwell doors were locked. The elevators could carry only a handful of people at a time before the heat made them inoperable. Desperate workers piled against the locked doors, and dozens chose to jump from the ninth floor windows rather than burn. Crowds on the street below watched in horror as bodies fell. The public outcry was immediate and overwhelming. Over three hundred thousand people marched in the funeral procession through lower Manhattan. The outrage transcended ethnic and class boundaries, creating political pressure that New York's Tammany Hall machine could not ignore. Within months, a Factory Investigating Commission was established that would spend the next four years documenting dangerous conditions across the state and recommending sweeping reforms. This episode tells the story of the locked doors that killed one hundred and forty-six workers, and how their deaths sparked a revolution in labor law, fire safety codes, and worker protections that fundamentally changed the relationship between American employers and the people who worked for them.
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