Bermuda Triangle Essay

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    A significant transition that happened in early 20th century in the United States was the reform in workers’ rights after the Triangle Factory Fire. 147 died after a fire broke out in 7th, 8th, and 9th floor, mostly women. Although casualties from unsafe factory conditions were not uncommon, this devastating fire really reformed and changed working conditions and workers’ rights. The focus of this essay will be to describe and argue how the medias influence and unions cooperation reformed the factory

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    The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory was a perfect example of the average sweatshop in the early twentieth century. It had long hours, low pay, hired young immigrant women, and most importantly, had a dangerous work environment. On March 25, 1911, a fire started in the 8th floor on a rag tub and it spread throughout the factory. The fire department did come, but it’s ladder and hoses were too short and couldn’t reach the 8th floor so not many people were saved. The workers were neglected of safety measures

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    Essay On Triangle Fire

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    The Triangle Shirtwaist Fire was an infamous part of our history as a nation. The fire began on the eighth floor of the Triangle Shirtwaist factory and quickly spread all throughout the building. The fire took almost one hundred and fifty lives, most of them being young women or girls. It was not just the fire that took so many lives though, but women and men alike jumping from many stories up, to their death, just to have a possibility to live. However, many women and men alike were brought

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    I am here to represent Mary Harris Jones and I believe she should be admitted to the Gilded University Hall of Fame. Jones was born in Ireland, and her family immigrated to escape the potato famine. She spent her early years studying and working to become a dressmaker and teacher. Later when she moved to Memphis, she met and married George Jones, and in their first four years of marriage they had four children. But tragedy struck when yellow fever spread in 1867, which killed hundreds of people including

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    newspaper, you notice a large printing at the top, reading, “148 leap to death or perish in fire.” As you read on, you come to realize that three days ago, women and men that lived on your street, are now dead due to a fire at the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory. The Triangle fire became one of the many greatest history stories in the United States, but at the time it happened, it built up not only in newspapers and rumors, but the streets filled with many people as they watched young women jump to their

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    Triangle Fire 1911

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    Blamelessness to Collective Guilt: Business and Government The Triangle Fire of 1911 was an event that resulted in a drastic shift in the way government oversight worked to check private business. Before the fire, American government had little to do with laws and regulations that controlled the actions of private businesses. To cross the line would mean to cross the sanctity of what made a business and business. The period following the Triangle Fire of 1911 would see this line be destroyed, as New York

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    On March 25, 1911, a Saturday afternoon, near closing time, a fire broke out in the Triangle Waist Company, on one of the top 3 floors of the ten story Asch Building. Within thirty minutes, 146 lives were lost, because of neglected safety features and locked doors. The fire is believed to have started by the careless use of a match from one of the cutters to get a smoke. Before ringing the fire alarm, the workers tried to extinguish the flames, but the flames quickly spread. It was the shirtwaists

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    According to Morrison County Record, on an awful Saturday the local machine shop burned down to the ground. One good thing came from this disaster, a firefighter is being recognized for her quick actions. Grace Gutzkow reacted fast and saved a man's life. Grace grew up in the small town of Royalton, Minnesota. She always wanted to become a firefighter for as long as she could remember. She volunteered for the Royalton Fire Department as much as possible. Her father has been an inspiration since

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    The nonfiction story, "Flesh, and Blood so Cheap," by Albert Marrin, have both either implicate and explicate evidence about how people do not care for others. This is because how the fire occurred in Triangle Factory. If people had cared for one another than things would have changed, like how the owner could have added fire alarms or extinguishers. This would have alerted people more and helped them get out or be safe faster. Extinguishers were invented in 1818, so this shows that the owner of

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    early 1900s, yet 146 lives were taken in the Triangle Fire. Could you imagine the lack of safety standards during this time period? The non-fictional story, Flesh and Blood So Cheap, by Albert Marrin, uses explicit and implicit evidence throughout the text to convey his theme about the unsafe conditions that resulted into the tragedy of the Triangle Fire. First of all, Marrin uses explicit ideas to inform readers about some of the events in the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory. For example, he states

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