March 25, 1911 was a Saturday—a beautiful day. Everyone who worked at the
Triangle Shirtwaist Factory, in
New York City, was looking forward to Sunday—their only day off. Some of the girls were singing, and quitting time was not far off. Then ... they saw flames in their workplace.
Someone had carelessly started a fire on the 8th floor. It didn't take long before
a firestorm traveled to the floors above.
The 9th floor became the scene of a disaster.
Fire escapes, at the time, were not designed for so many fleeing people. Only one fire escape was available for the Triangle workers, and it collapsed due to the heat of the fire and the weight of so many people trying to save their lives.
Doors, locked from the outside in—to keep union agitators from entering, or for whatever other reasons—caused many workers to be trapped inside a
worsening inferno.
On the streets below, people were horrified as they looked up. They could do even less than the firefighters. One of the observers, however—Frances Perkins—did something years later when she was able to
protect workers as FDR’s Secretary of Labor (serving in that position from 1933-1945). She once said that the day of the Triangle Fire was "the day the New Deal was born."
The highest ladder, which
the NY City fire department had available, only reached the 6th floor. That was three floors too short for the stranded, terrified workers.