Labor Stories: It took a catastrophic fire to make the workplace safe

A close look at American history would suggest we are a reactive nation — an event happens and we respond in a way to ‘correct’ the malady. This seems especially true inside the workplace. If you polled workers today, many would say it is their ‘right’ to have a safe place to work — but few know the cost of human life required to bring about that right.

One of the deadliest industrial accident took place in New York City at the Triangle Shirtwaist Company in 1911. The company, in today’s vernacular, was a sweatshop and just two years earlier established itself as a non-union shop — refusing to negotiate during the Uprising of 20,000. The company went so far as to hired thugs and prostitutes to harass strikers. Even the police and courts sided with the company as strikers were often arrested on trumped-up charges. The majority of the strikers were women and inside the courtroom they faced hostile judges — one women was even scolded by a judge and told, “You are striking against God and nature.”

In Uprising of 20,000 by Tony Michels, he notes that:

In one month, 723 people were arrested and 19 sentenced to the workhouse. Bail averaged $2,500 per day, and court fines totaled $5,000. Overall, the strike cost $100,000. Clara Lemlich [the 23-year-old leader in the movement] suffered six broken ribs and was arrested a total of seventeen times. In one egregious miscarriage of justice, a ten-year-old girl was tried without testimony and sentenced to five days in the workhouse for allegedly assaulting a scab.

Although, other companies during the Uprising of 20,000 ceded to most of the demands — like a fifty-two-hour week [they were working up to 16 hours per day], at least four holidays with pay per year, provision of tools and materials without fee [they previously had to buy their own sewing machine]  and negotiation of wages with employees — the Triangle Shirtwaist Company refused to negotiate and eventually purged the company of most union loyalists.

So how did 146 people lose their lives in the fire on Saturday, March 25, 1911?

  1. They were working in overcrowded condition making exiting the building difficult.
  2. The factory owners had locked the exits to prevent workers from ‘stealing time’ and to keep union organizers out.
  3. The sole fire escape ladder bent under the heat and weight of people escaping.
  4. Fire crews did not have adequate ladders (most of the workers killed were trapped on the 9th floor).

The incident went to court where the company was acquitted of all charges. The company collected insurance money and re-opened its business at a new address. Triangle Shirtwaist Company offered a settlement of one week’s wage (about $5-$20, depending on position) to the victims’ families, however in 1914 a judge ordered them to pay $75 to each of the 23 families that had sued.

Public backlash and sympathy to the workers, though, did eventually lead to change through the creation of the Factory Investigating Commission. This agency was instrumental in drafting new legislation that set occupancy limits, required automated sprinkling systems — and drafted employment laws designed to protect women and children.

Categories: Labor History | Tags: , ,

Forgiveness a Matter of Allegiance in Post-Civil War Era

One of the most interesting stories I have uncovered while doing family history research is the story of Champ Ferguson and Tinker Dave Beaty (also spelled Beatty). According to family tradition and oral history, these two men may have been friends before the Civil War. In court testimony Beaty — testifying against Ferguson — said he knew Champ for 18 to 20 years. Friends, or not, they definitely knew each other.

Both men lived in the Cumberland Plateau region of south central Kentucky and north central Tennessee. Ferguson was born and raised in Clinton County, Kentucky and Beaty lived across the state line in Overton County, Tennessee.

Once the Civil War commenced in 1861, it did not take long for conflict to begin in the region — and by the end of the War, hundreds of people in the regions died — under the guise of military action. But, a close look at the action of men on both sides of the conflicts shows that, in many ways, the War had been reduced to personal vendettas and thievery.

When the War ended and amnesty was offered to Confederate soldiers — it was not offered to Ferguson because of his guerilla warfare tactics. Instead, he was arrested, tried, convicted and hanged in Nashville. The indictment against Ferguson was for 53 murders, but by his own admission, the number of men he killed was closer to 100.

One of the key issues with the war in the region was the no quarters — or take no prisoners — approach to warfare. Both Beaty and Ferguson admnitted they executed captured men. Ferguson, in his trial, justified it by saying he only killed those trying to kill him.

The stories against both men include execution of unarmed private citizens as well — the only ‘crime’ of many of those killed was being on the wrong side of the conflict.

Yet, after the War ended Ferguson was executed and Beaty went on to become a politically influential man in the region. His son, Claiborne was even called upon by the Governor of Tennessee to help curb post-War KKK activity in the area.

In war, being on the winning side is everything.

Categories: Appalachia, Civil War History, Cumberland Plateau, Family History, Genealogy | Tags: , , , , , , ,

Has the definition of treason changed?

My grandfather from the Revoluionary War era Shadrach Claywell, probably like many Colonists, volunteered and fought against the British in the American Revolutionary War.

He served three tours of duty starting his first tour at the age of 20. His final tour was cut short at the battle of Guilford CourtHouse when he was captured by the British. As a POW he was taken up into Canada before being released at the end of the War at which point he made his way back home to Bedford County, Va. (Side note: Contrary to Mel Gibson’s portrayal of the Battle of Guilford Courthouse in The Patriot, the British actually won — although at a high cost)

For me, Shadrach’s story became more intriguing later in life when his name surfaced in an investigation concerning another person receiving a Revolutionary War pension. In the investigation, it was alleged that Shadrach had colluded with the enemy. Due to the nature of the accusation, Shadrach’s pension was suspended and an investigation ensued.

In the investigation, the facts of his alleged collusion was presented as such: Shortly after his capture by the British, Shadrach contracted chicken pox. He was imprisoned in what sounds like an outbuilding away from the Brits (probably due to his disease) — and at some point the British offered him better treatment if he would help them — which apparently he did.

But the body investigating Shadrach’s pension seemed to have no qualms with it, noting that Shadrach did what he had to do to save his life — something, they said, anyone would be expected to do.

Categories: American Revolutionary War | Tags: