Hellraisers Journal: Metropolitan Opera House: Rose Schneiderman Speaks to Public: “We Have Found You Wanting”

Share

Hellraisers Journal: Metropolitan Opera House: Rose Schneiderman Speaks to Public: “We Have Found You Wanting”———-

Hellraisers Journal – Tuesday April 4, 1911
New York, New York – Rose Schneiderman Speaks at Metropolitan Opera House

From The New York Times of April 3, 1911:

MASS MEETING CALLS FOR NEW FIRE LAWS
———-
Metropolitan Opera House Gathering Decides to
Name a Standing Committee on Protection.
———-

WORKERS NOT IN ACCORD
———-
Woman Union Leader Says They Have Lost Faith
In the Public and Must Rely on Themselves.
———-

Triangle Fire, Compliance Fire Escape by B Robinson, NY Tb p1, Mar 28, 1911

More people went to the Metropolitan Opera House yesterday to participate in the council on the Asch Building fire disaster than could find seats in the grand tier, where the boxes were reserved, or in the orchestra and galleries, where they were open to all. Those in the grand tier came in automobiles, and were admitted at a special side entrance opened thirty minutes before the other doors. Those in the orchestra floor for the main part were from the upper west side, while the east siders overflowed one gallery after another until they had packed the house.

The meeting, which lasted from 3 o’clock until 5:20, proved to be more cosmopolitan than harmonious. The men in the upper galleries, instead of applauding the programme brought forward by the leaders to obtain better fire protection laws, reserved their loudest cheers for those who dissented from the programme, on the ground that citizens’ committees were incapable of doing any real good and had always proved a failure.

The outcome of the meeting was the adoption of resolutions by a partial vote calling for the creation of a permanent committee to advocate new legislation and see that there is no official neglect to enforce such laws as now exist.

The dissenters from this programme held that there would be no improvement for the working classes until in class solidarity they demanded it at the polls and through committees of their own. They advocated the organization of working people into Assembly district committees and the giving of fire inspectorship privileges to labor union officials.

The Speakers Interrupted.

Rose Schneiderman,ed, LOC, see Chg Un Lbr Adv p26, Jan 1909

Every little while from the topmost gallery shouts from Socialists interrupted the speakers, and once the meeting got away from the Chairman’s control while those upstairs cheered for the interrupters and those below attempted to hiss them down. There was one moment when feeling grew tense to a snapping point, and the audience was held too closely by the speaker’s words to interrupt or applaud as the girl who had been speaking went back up the stage to her seat.

Rose Schneiderman, who led the workers out of the Triangle factory in their strike two years ago and bailed them out after being arrested, found words difficult when she tried to speak. She stood silent for a moment, and then began to speak hardly above a whisper. But the silence was such that everywhere they carried clearly……

Continue reading “Hellraisers Journal: Metropolitan Opera House: Rose Schneiderman Speaks to Public: “We Have Found You Wanting””

Hellraisers Journal: The Ladies’ Garment Worker: “We Mourn the Death of Our Members at the Triangle Waist Company”

Share

Quote Morris Rosenfeld, Mayn Rue Plats, see Silverman, 2010—————

Hellraisers Journal – Monday April 3, 1911
International Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Union in Mourning

From The Ladies Garment Worker of April 1911:

Triangle Fire, We Mourn, ILGWU, LGW Jr p1, Apr 1911

When ready to go to press we learn of the awful calamity at the Triangle Waist Company. While most of the garment manufacturing establishments in New York City are not any better as far as fire protection is concerned, it is significant that the worst calamity happened at the Triangle, known among the workpeople in the trade as the “prison.” The name is probably due the extraordinary discipline with poor earning for which the firm is famous.

It is not strange that in this most democratic of all countries in the world the employers can so easily use the arm of the law to protect themselves against any inconveniences which their workpeople may cause them, but the law is nowhere when the life and limb of the worker is to be protected.

The writer of these lines, when approaching the factory some two years ago in an attempt to organize the workpeople of that firm, was pounced upon by two plain clothed policemen and taken to the police cell. No one, however, knows whom to blame for this calamity.

It is evident that the worker can expect next to nothing in the way of protection from the legal authorities. Whether it is the Supreme Court or the good people who are interested in the architectural beauties of the city, nothing will be done until the workers will begin in earnest to attend to their own business. They must declare a strike at all such fire traps until adequate protection is provided.

Pickets should be posted at the entrance of such places with sign boards bearing the following inscription: Please do not go to work in this place until proper fire protection is provided for the workpeople.

Let the authorities find our action contrary to the Sherman Anti-Trust Laws or any other of the innumerable laws provide to safeguard the interest of the capitalists, and which the authorities are ever ready to guard jealousy. We will cheerfully go to prison but there will be no more fire traps. Such a strike will put an end to such a state of things within 48 hours.

———-

There are in the same building a number of cloak shops, who before the general strike, worked until 6 o’clock on Saturdays. Thanks to the change in hours all these left at 1 o’clock, otherwise the victims would have been more numerous.

[Emphasis added.]

Continue reading “Hellraisers Journal: The Ladies’ Garment Worker: “We Mourn the Death of Our Members at the Triangle Waist Company””

Hellraisers Journal: From the New York Evening World: “Some of the Girl Victims of Washington Place Fire Trap”

Share

Quote William Shepherd, Triangle Fire, Shirtwaist Strikers of a Year Ago, Mlk Jr, Mar 27, 1911, Cornell—————

Hellraisers Journal – Saturday April 1, 1911
New York, New York – Some of the Many Girls Who Perished in Triangle Fire

From the New York Evening World of March 27, 1911:

Triangle Fire, Some Girl Victims, NY Eve Wld p3, Mar 27, 1911

Continue reading “Hellraisers Journal: From the New York Evening World: “Some of the Girl Victims of Washington Place Fire Trap””

Hellraisers Journal: From The New York Call: Photographs of Twenty Victims of the Triangle Fire, 16 Women, 4 Men

Share

Rose Schneiderman Quote, Life So Cheap, NY Met Opera Hse, Apr 2, Survey p84, Apr 8, 1911—————

Hellraisers Journal – Friday March 31, 1911
New York, New York – Some of the Young Victims of Triangle Fire

From The New York Call of March 28, 1911:

Triangle Fire, 20 Victims, NY Cl p2, Mar 28, 1911

———-

Triangle Fire, HdLn Hell Hole,Sculls by Crosby NY Cl p1, Mar 28, 1911

———-

Continue reading “Hellraisers Journal: From The New York Call: Photographs of Twenty Victims of the Triangle Fire, 16 Women, 4 Men”

Hellraisers Journal: “Mammon devours our sons and daughters” -by Morris Rosenfeld, from Jewish Daily Forward

Share

Quote Morris Rosenfeld fr Triangle Requiem, JDF Mar 29, 1911, L Stein 1962—————

Hellraisers Journal – Thursday March 30, 1911
“Damned be the rich! Damned be the system! Damned be the world!”

From the Jewish Daily Forward of March 29, 1911:

Triangle Fire Requiem by Morris Rosenfeld

Neither battle nor fiendish pogrom
Fills this great city with sorrow;
Nor does the earth shudder or lightning rend the heavens,
No clouds darken, no cannon’s roar shatters the air.
Only hell’s fire engulfs these slave stalls
And Mammon devours our sons and daughters.
Wrapt in scarlet flames, they drop to death from his maw
And death receives them all.

Sisters mine, oh my sisters; brethren
Hear my sorrow:
See where the dead are hidden in dark corners,
Where life is choked from those who labor.
Oh, woe is me, and woe is to the world
On this Sabbath
When an avalanche of red blood and fire
Pours forth from the god of gold on high
As now my tears stream forth unceasingly.
Damned be the rich!
Damned be the system!
Damned be the world!

Over whom shall we weep first?
Over the burned ones?
Over those beyond recognition?
Over those who have been crippled?
Or driven senseless?
Or smashed?
I weep for them all.

Now let us light the holy candles
And mark the sorrow
Of Jewish masses in darkness and poverty.
This is our funeral,
These our graves,
Our children,
The beautiful, beautiful flowers destroyed,
Our lovely ones burned,
Their ashes buried under a mountain of caskets.

There will come a time
When your time will end, you golden princes.
Meanwhile,
Let this haunt your consciences:
Let the burning building, our daughters in flame
Be the nightmare that destroys your sleep,
The poison that embitters your lives,
The horror that kills your joy.
And in the midst of celebrations for your children,
May you be struck blind with fear over the
Memory of this red avalanche
Until time erases you.

Continue reading “Hellraisers Journal: “Mammon devours our sons and daughters” -by Morris Rosenfeld, from Jewish Daily Forward”

Hellraisers Journal: Cartoonist Tad Dorgan and Boardman Robinson Probe Responsibility for Triangle Shirtwaist Fire

Share

Rose Schneiderman Quote, Life So Cheap, NY Met Opera Hse, Apr 2, Survey p84, Apr 8, 1911—————

Hellraisers Journal – Wednesday March 29, 1911
Tad Dorgan and Boardman Robinson Probe Triangle Fire

From the New York Evening Journal of March 28, 1911
-cropped and edited:

Triangle Fire, Who is Responsible by TAD, NY Eve Jr, Mar 28, 1911

Continue reading “Hellraisers Journal: Cartoonist Tad Dorgan and Boardman Robinson Probe Responsibility for Triangle Shirtwaist Fire”

Hellraisers Journal: From The New York Call: How Long Will Workers Permit Themselves to Be Burned in Their Shops?

Share

Quote Morris Rosenfeld, Mayn Rue Plats, see Silverman, 2010—————

Hellraisers Journal – Tuesday March 28, 1911
“How Long Will the Workers Permit Themselves
to Be Burned as Well as Enslaved in Their Shops?”

From The New York Call of March 27, 1911:

Triangle Fire, Msthd BNR HdLn, NYC p1, Mar 27, 1911Triangle Fire, Hunt for Lost Ones, NYC p1, Mar 27, 1911

Continue reading “Hellraisers Journal: From The New York Call: How Long Will Workers Permit Themselves to Be Burned in Their Shops?”

Hellraisers Journal: From Forverts: The Entire Jewish Neighborhood Is In Grief; “Mothers and Relatives Sob and Keen”

Share

Quote Forverts, The Kiss, JDF, Mar 26, 1911—————

Hellraisers Journal – Monday March 27, 1911
New York City – Mothers Sob and Keen for Blocks Around Site of Tragic Fire

From Forverts of March 26, 1911
 -“The Entire Jewish Quarter Is In Grief”

Triangle Fire, Grief, JDF Msthd, HdLn p1, Mar 26, 1911

Continue reading “Hellraisers Journal: From Forverts: The Entire Jewish Neighborhood Is In Grief; “Mothers and Relatives Sob and Keen””

WE NEVER FORGET: March 25, 1911, 4:40 pm: The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire, Life So Cheap and Property So Sacred

Share

Rose Schneiderman Quote, Life So Cheap———-

Life So Cheap; Property So Sacred
———-

From The New York Call of March 27, 1911:

The Real Triangle by John Sloan, crpd, NY Call p1, Mar 27, 1911
“The Real Triangle” by John Sloan

From the Jewish Daily Forward of January 10, 1910:

The “Triangle” company…With blood this name will be written in the history of the American workers’ movement, and with feeling will this history recall the names of the strikers of this shop-of the crusaders.

City Hall, New York City,
-December 28, 1910

Testimony before the New York State Senate and Assembly Joint Investigating Committee on Corrupt Practices and Insurance Companies Other Than Life Insurance:

Judge M. Linn Bruce, Counsel
Chief Edward F Croker, NYC Fire Department

Bruce: How high can you successfully combat a fire now?
Croker: Not over eighty-five feet.
Bruce: That would be how many stories of an ordinary building?
Croker: About seven.
Bruce: Is this a serious danger?
Croker: I think if you want to go into the so-called workshops which are along Fifth Avenue and west of Broadway and east of Sixth Avenue, twelve, fourteen or fifteen story buildings they call workshops, you will find it very interesting to see the number of people in one of these buildings with absolutely not one fire protection, with out any means of escape in case of fire.

Continue reading “WE NEVER FORGET: March 25, 1911, 4:40 pm: The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire, Life So Cheap and Property So Sacred”