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American History
Related: About this forumOn this day, October 11, 2023, a memorial to the victims of the Triangle Shirtwaist factory fire was unveiled.
Last edited Tue Oct 15, 2024, 03:19 PM - Edit history (2)
The Triangle Fire Memorial
The long-awaited Triangle Fire Memorial to the victims and legacy of the 1911 Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire was dedicated October 11, 2023, at the site of the historic fire in New York City.
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The long-awaited Triangle Fire Memorial to the victims and legacy of the 1911 Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire was dedicated October 11, 2023, at the site of the historic fire in New York City.
{snip}
Opinion | At last, the 146 ghosts of the Triangle Fire are being immortalized
By David Von Drehle
Deputy opinion editor and columnist
October 9, 2023 at 5:45 a.m. EDT
The challenge when writing history is to break the glass that separates us from the past. To connect somehow with those who lived before us and turn them back into people not flat abstractions in funny clothes.
The glass-breaking moment for me, when I set out long ago to write a history of the Triangle Shirtwaist factory fire the 1911 industrial disaster that shaped the politics of New York and later the entire nation came when I learned that some of the victims, moments from death yet cheerfully unawares, were singing at the end of their workday. Every Little Movement, a hit Broadway show tune, was their equivalent of the latest from Taylor Swift. Some joke or passing remark or reference to a boyfriend had reminded one of them of the lyrics, and when she launched in, others joined her, as happy humans often do.
They were flesh and blood, as real as you and I. And then they were gone incinerated in their ninth-floor death trap or smashed on the Greenwich Village pavement where they plunged. No publication even bothered to record all their names. ... Now, New Yorkers and visitors to the city will be able to have their own glass-breaking moments at the site of the historic fire, which was the deadliest workplace disaster in city history until the day known as 9/11. The Triangle Fire Memorial, a project years in the making, will be dedicated on Wednesday at the corner of Washington Place and Greene Street near Washington Square in the heart of Manhattan.
The 146 fire victims most of them immigrant women from Italy and Eastern Europe will be restored as actual names of actual people, at the very spot where they passed into history. Their names are cut into the flowing steel of the monument, which when all the pieces are installed this winter will stretch like ribbon to ninth-floor windows, then tumble back toward street level, where it will spread its arms to embrace the building where history happened. Light shining through the incised names will reflect on a polished surface, where they will appear as if glowing.
A rendering of the Triangle Fire Memorial, set to be unveiled on Wednesday in New York. (Uri Wegman and Richard Joon Yoo)
{snip}
To the left, firefighters work to douse the flames at the Triangle Shirtwaist factory in 1911. To the right, people walk pasta building in the same location {that building}* a day before the 100th anniversary of the fire in March 2011. (Hulton Archive/Getty Images; Mario Tama/Getty Images)
{snip}
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https://wapo.st/48IWsK8
Opinion by David Von Drehle
David Von Drehle is a deputy opinion editor for The Post and writes a weekly column. He was previously an editor-at-large for Time Magazine, and is the author of four books, including Rise to Greatness: Abraham Lincoln and Americas Most Perilous Year and Triangle: The Fire That Changed America. Twitter https://twitter.com/DavidVonDrehle
By David Von Drehle
Deputy opinion editor and columnist
October 9, 2023 at 5:45 a.m. EDT
The challenge when writing history is to break the glass that separates us from the past. To connect somehow with those who lived before us and turn them back into people not flat abstractions in funny clothes.
The glass-breaking moment for me, when I set out long ago to write a history of the Triangle Shirtwaist factory fire the 1911 industrial disaster that shaped the politics of New York and later the entire nation came when I learned that some of the victims, moments from death yet cheerfully unawares, were singing at the end of their workday. Every Little Movement, a hit Broadway show tune, was their equivalent of the latest from Taylor Swift. Some joke or passing remark or reference to a boyfriend had reminded one of them of the lyrics, and when she launched in, others joined her, as happy humans often do.
They were flesh and blood, as real as you and I. And then they were gone incinerated in their ninth-floor death trap or smashed on the Greenwich Village pavement where they plunged. No publication even bothered to record all their names. ... Now, New Yorkers and visitors to the city will be able to have their own glass-breaking moments at the site of the historic fire, which was the deadliest workplace disaster in city history until the day known as 9/11. The Triangle Fire Memorial, a project years in the making, will be dedicated on Wednesday at the corner of Washington Place and Greene Street near Washington Square in the heart of Manhattan.
The 146 fire victims most of them immigrant women from Italy and Eastern Europe will be restored as actual names of actual people, at the very spot where they passed into history. Their names are cut into the flowing steel of the monument, which when all the pieces are installed this winter will stretch like ribbon to ninth-floor windows, then tumble back toward street level, where it will spread its arms to embrace the building where history happened. Light shining through the incised names will reflect on a polished surface, where they will appear as if glowing.
A rendering of the Triangle Fire Memorial, set to be unveiled on Wednesday in New York. (Uri Wegman and Richard Joon Yoo)
{snip}
To the left, firefighters work to douse the flames at the Triangle Shirtwaist factory in 1911. To the right, people walk past
{snip}
Share
https://wapo.st/48IWsK8
Opinion by David Von Drehle
David Von Drehle is a deputy opinion editor for The Post and writes a weekly column. He was previously an editor-at-large for Time Magazine, and is the author of four books, including Rise to Greatness: Abraham Lincoln and Americas Most Perilous Year and Triangle: The Fire That Changed America. Twitter https://twitter.com/DavidVonDrehle
* Thanks for the correction, intheflow. As of October 11, 2024, the Washington Post still hasn't corrected the caption.
Mon Oct 9, 2023: Interesting! But one correction:
The side by side photos from 1911 and today says the modern photo is of a building on the site of the factory. But if you look closely, its the same building. The fire didnt destroy the building, only lives.
Triangle Fire Memorial
Mon Mar 25, 2024: On this day, March 25, 1911, the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire occurred.
Mon Mar 4, 2024: On this day, March 4, 1933, Frances Perkins became Secretary of Labor.
Mon Oct 9, 2023: Opinion: At last, the 146 ghosts of the Triangle Fire are being immortalized
Sat Mar 25, 2023: On this day, March 25, 1911, the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire occurred.
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On this day, October 11, 2023, a memorial to the victims of the Triangle Shirtwaist factory fire was unveiled. (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
Oct 11
OP
Drum
(9,793 posts)1. My wife's office used to be right across from there, on Greene Street.
In October a few years ago, an NYU colleague of hers produced a stirring drama about it. Beginning outdoors on that very corner and proceeding through Washington Square Park, we were introduced to the characters lives in a number of vignettes addressing working conditions and rights to vote/organize, and culminating in a theater space, where the workers final hour was depicted.
We were all weeping at the conclusion. Stunned and moved.