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Summary: The Tragedy Of The Triangle Shirtwaist Fire

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The tragedy of the Triangle Shirtwaist fire and the events that ensued afterwards are not the first to exemplify workers’ loss of freedom due to the corruptibility of government by powerful corporate interests. In 1905, the Supreme Court in Lochner v. New York declared unconstitutional a state law establishing a limitation to the number of hours employees could work (626). The court held that liberty of contract is implicit in the Fourteenth Amendment and such a law “interfered with the right of contract between employer and employee” (626). In response, workers felt they were being granted liberties they did not want, and the liberties that were of “real value” were being withheld (626). The “overwhelming labor question” thus sparked labor walkouts and …show more content…

In the end, a battle took place between armed strikers and 300 Pinkerton policemen, prompting the death of seven workers and three Pinkerton agents (638). The Amalgamated Association was then dissolved. What the Homestead strike proved as that “neither a powerful union nor public opinion could influence the conduct of the largest corporations” (638), which would remain the case for the Triangle Shirtwaist trial that would take place only twenty years later. Even in the wake of the fire that occurred on March 25th, 1911, trade unionists and socialists were only partially successful in advancing their cause. Despite the twenty-five laws that were eventually passed, including fire safety regulations like fire safety drills and automatic sprinklers, the strikers still did not receive union recognition (215). Perhaps those 146 lives would not have been lost on that fateful day if Blanca and Harris had approved a union, whose demands consisted of addressing the locked door policy and the structural integrity of fire

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