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Garment Industry

Contents
History > Composition of the Garment Industry > Dressmaking > Dressmaking in the 1870s > Women's Fashions in the 1890s > Department Stores and Changing Fashion > Garment Industry in NYC Today > Garment Labeling > Sweatshops > Triangle Shirtwaist Factory > Sewing Machine

Triangle Shirtwaist Factory

On Saturday, March 25, 1911, a fire broke out in the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory, occupying the top three floors of 19 Washington Place. The managers had locked the doors to the stairways (they claimed it prevented theft and absenteeism) shutting off escape for the workers. Because the top floors of the ten-story building were too high for the firemen to reach, some women began jumping from the windows and fire escapes. Within minutes, 146 people were dead, most of them young Jewish and Italian women.

The fire devastated the immigrants on the Lower East Side, many of whom worked in the garment industry and were then attempting to unionize its factories (the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory was not unionized and wouldn't have been opened on a Saturday if it had been). Reformers, survivors, families of the deceased, and other neighborhood residents organized mass demonstrations, meetings, and memorial services. The one positive aspect of the disaster was that it propelled the movement for stricter factory safety laws and their enforcement in the garment industry.


Leon Stein, The Triangle Fire (New York 1975).

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