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(solemn cello music)
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MALE NARRATOR:
Late on the afternoon of Saturday, March 25th, 1911,
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the 500 employees of the Triangle Shirt Waist
Company were racing to fill their quotas.
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Teenage girls, for the most part,
eager to finish up, collect their pay,
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and plunge into the mild spring evening.
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Around 4:45 pm, with just 15 minutes left
in the work day, someone on the 8th floor
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must have dropped a match or a burning cigarette
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into the heaps of discarded fabric
that littered the shop floor.
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JOSHUA FREEMAN:
Triangle Shirt Waist Company occupied
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the top floors of a ten story building
and a fire broke out.
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Apparently someone had dropped a cigarette
into a drawer
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that held what they called remnants,
or scraps of cloth, and the fire started pretty quickly
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and the doors were locked,
allegedly to keep out Union organizers.
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This was a company that resists Unionization,
or was trying to.
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So, with this rapidly spreading fire,
there was really very little way to get out,
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and there is always a horrible carnage.
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NARRATOR:
Within seconds, the combustible litter of cloth
and tissue paper had burst into flames,
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and before anyone could stop it,
the fire began to spread
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with startling speed
from one stack of fabric to another.
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As cries of panic went out,
and terrified workers scrambled for the exits.
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ROSIE SOFFRAN:
I heard somebody cry "Fire."
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I ran for the door on the Washington Place side,
but the door was locked,
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and immediately there was a great jam
of girls before it.
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Some girls were screaming,
some were beating the door with their fists,
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some were trying to tear it open.
--Rosie Soffran
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It was horrifying.
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It was a large loft in which the doors
had been locked from the outside,
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and so when the fire began,
the women working at the machines tried
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to get out of the exits, could not move the doors,
and there are accounts of bodies
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being crushed up against the doors,
and of women trying to escape.
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NARRATOR:
Most workers on the 10th floor managed to escape
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helped to safety across an adjoining rooftop
by students from New York University.
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Hundreds more made it down by elevator--
30 people at a time jammed into cars
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meant to hold half that number.
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But by 4:55, the searing heat had forced
the last of the elevators out of service.
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And with the fire now spreading
from the 8th floor to the 9th,
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nearly 200 women remained trapped
in the building with no means of escape.
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On the 8th floor workers tried bravely
to stop the fire,
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but the flames were too quick
and the water pressure in the fire hoses failed them.
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As the searing heat and smoke intensified,
the factory floor became an incinerator
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and as bodies piled up
in front of the locked main exit,
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those who still could raced for a fire escape
on the far western end of the building.
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Fewer than 20 women managed to get out
before the rusted metal supports gave way
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sending several workers plunging to their death
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and cutting off the last means of escape
for all the others.
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With a wall of fire advancing on them,
the terrified women moved to the open windows.
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TESSA BANANI:
The girls behind us were screaming and crying.
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Several of them, as the flames crept closer,
ran into the smoke
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and we heard them scream
as the flames caught their clothes.
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One little girl who worked
at the machine opposite me,
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cried out in Italian, "Goodbye, goodbye."
--Tessa Banani
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NARRATOR:
Outside on the street below,
a huge crowd had gathered.
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The New York Fire Department had arrived
within minutes of the call,
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rushing 35 vehicles to the scene
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along with the most modern fire fighting
equipment in the country.
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But even the tallest ladder could go no farther
than the 6th floor,
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two full stories below the burning factory floors,
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where tons of flame could already be seen
curling out of the windows.
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CHRISTINE STANSELL:
The fire, of course, like any fire in Manhattan,
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could be spotted from blocks and blocks around
because of the smoke,
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so there were big crowds on the streets below
and the fire had gone on long enough
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that people had also heard the word down
below the Lower East Side
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and had come up to the Village waiting
to see what would happen.
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Then it became apparent
in this heart-gripping moment
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that no one could get out
except if they jumped.
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NARRATOR:
At 5:05, a laborer named Dominick Cardiani,
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pushing his wheel barrel down Green Street,
heard a muffled explosion
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followed by the sound of breaking glass.
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Glancing up, he saw what he thought
were dark bundles of clothes sailing
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from an 8th floor window.
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ROBERT A. CARO:
You know, you can hardly believe it
when you read about it.
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I mean imagine, from the 8th, 9th,
and 10th floors of a building
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overlooking Washington Square Park.
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First, this great ton of flame leaps out, you know,
and passersby and some policemen said,
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oh, it was just a momentary accident,
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then all of a sudden, one passerby said something
that looked like an bale of old clothes
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comes plummeting down from the 8th floor
and hits with this thud
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that somehow seemed too loud
for a bale of clothes on the sidewalk.
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And someone said they must be throwing,
and it was burning as it fell,
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they must be throwing out
the burning bales of clothes.
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And then other bodies started to come down.
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People realized that there were young girls
who'd go out on the ledge
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and the flames would be looming up behind them,
and they'd jump, of course to die.
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Some would try to cling to the ledge
with their fingertips, but they couldn't.
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You have plummeting down to the street scores
of burning dead bodies.
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CHRISTINE STANSELL:
There was also an iron fence below,
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so some of the young women when they jumped
were impaled on the iron fence.
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And people who saw it said
that they never forgot it.
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That it was a sight that burned itself
on the retina of the watchers.
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NARRATOR:
William Shepherd, a reporter for the United Press
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called the story as he watched
from a payphone across the street.
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WILLIAM SHEPHERD:
I learned a new sound,
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a more horrible sound
than description can picture.
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It was the thud of a speeding,
living body on the stone sidewalk.
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Thud. Dead. Thud. Dead. Thud. Dead. Thud. Dead.
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There was plenty of chance to watch them
as they came down.
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The height was 80 feet.
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The first ten thuds, deads, shocked me.
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I looked up, saw that there were scores of girls
at the windows,
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the flames from the floor below
were beating in their faces.
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Somehow I knew that they too must come down.
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I even watched one girl falling, waving her arms,
trying to keep her body upright
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until the very instant she struck the sidewalk.
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Then came the thud and a silent,
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unmoving pile of clothing and twisted broken limbs.
--William Shepherd
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NARRATOR:
By now, dozens of women at a time
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could be seen standing
at the 8th and 9th floor windows
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all but engulfed by the inferno.
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As those below watched in horror, groups of women,
three and four at a time,
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grabbed each other by the hand,
closed their eyes, and plunged off the building.
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"They hit the pavement just like rain,"
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a stunned fire chief
named Edward Worth later testified.
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Frances Perkins, a 31-year-old advocate
with the Consumers League stood
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with her hand at her throat,
helpless to stop the unfolding tragedy.
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FRANCES PERKINS:
The nets were broken.
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The firemen kept shouting for them not to jump,
but they had no choice.
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The flames were right behind them.
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For by this time, the fire was far gone.
--Frances Perkins
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NARRATOR:
By 5:15 the scene on the street was a bedlam
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as thousands of workers poured out
of nearby factories
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and pressed against the barricades.
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Fire engine horses reared
at the strong smell of blood
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while police tried,
without success, to control the crowd.
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MALE:
The floods of water from the fireman's hose
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that ran into the gutter were actually
stained red with blood.
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I looked upon the heap of dead bodies
and I remembered these girls
were shirt waist makers.
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I remembered their great strike of last year
in which these same girls had demanded
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more sanitary conditions
and more safety precautions in these shops.
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These dead bodies were the answer.