The Textile Industry and the Triangle Factory Fire
by Roberta McCutcheon
Overview:
Dramatic change characterized the rapid industrialization of nineteenth-century
America. The economy, politics, society and specifically women were all
affected. In the early stages of this economic revolution, manufacturing
was moved to factories in newly developing urban areas. Young women began
working in the textile industry as early as 1820. Later on as goods were
increasingly produced by machines run by unskilled labor, the number of
women in the industrial workforce grew. Women entered the ranks of industrial
workforce as seamstresses who produced ready-made clothing in the city
sweatshops. One event, the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire, helps us
to understand the experience of these women.
Using the classroom as an historical laboratory, students can use primary
and secondary sources to research the history of women and the industrialization
of America in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
Objectives:
1. Students will create a model to evaluate the validity of historical
evidence.
2. Students will examine primary documents and factual references to analyze
the effects of technology on America in the 19th and early 20th centuries.
3. Students will examine how the industrial revolution changed the lives
of women.
4. Students will analyze the causes and effects of the Triangle Factory
fire and consider the historical context of the event.
Activity One:
- Analysis of the documents:
- Have the class read various accounts of the Triangle Shirtwaist
Factory fire. Then, as a class, begin a discussion about a strategy
for identifying information in the documents. As a class, formulate
a list of questions in order to identify relevant information from
the accounts. Questions regarding the author's relationship to the
fire—witness, survivor, newspaper reported, official--will
help the students to visualize and imagine the event and its significance
to our understanding of factory work in New York City.
- Critiquing the documents to identify bias. Ask the students about
the author's purpose in order to clarify the contextual conditions
that influence perceptions.
- The following websites provide information about the fire from a
variety of sources. There are primary documents that include images,
accounts from survivors, witnesses and diverse interested parties.
- Have the students write a model for analysis that will help them
read the documents with a critical eye. Students should understand that
they will be using the documents to create their own account of the
event.
Activity Two:
- Have the students work in groups to research the events of March
25, 1911, the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire in New York City and
the investigation, the indictments, and trial that resulted from the
event.
- In order to determine the kind of information they need to understand
why the tragedy occurred, students should identify the important historical
questions they want to ask. Questions might include:
- What were the working conditions for women in the textile industry?
- Were there laws regulating factory work? If so, what were they?
- How did the fire start?
- Who was responsible for the safety of the workers?
- What did the investigation reveal?
- How do the indictments and trial help us to understand the attitude
of the government and the public to both industrialists and the
working class?
- Divide the class into several groups. Have students create an account
of the event. Each group might choose to create one of the following:
- A newspaper edition devoted to the event, the trial and the reforms
adopted as a result of the fire. This should include personal accounts
of survivors, witnesses, owners of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory.
- A pamphlet for the ILGWU that uses the Triangle Fire to convince
women of the importance of standing together in the union.
- Film a newscast about the event.
Activity Three:
- Using the following website which examines the original trial, retry
the defendants.
http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/triangle/
trianglefire.html
Activity Four:
- Using the following sites and the instructions for analyzing primary
documents and secondary information, research early industrialization
of the textile industry in the United States. This may be done in groups
and the information shared.
Have students use the information to write a history of the industrialization
of the textile industry in the first half of the nineteenth century.
Students may work as a class or in small groups, and the project might
take the form of one of the following:
- A children’s book
- A comic book
- A chapter for a textbook
Extension Activities:
Essay
To what extent did changes in the textile industry in the nineteenth and
early twentieth centuries affect the lives of women in the United States.
Be sure to identify the women that you are including in your discussion.
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