On March 25, 1911, a small fire broke out inside the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory in Manhattan.
Less than 30 minutes later, 146 workers were dead.
Most were young immigrant women and teenage girls.
Some burned.
Some suffocated.
Some jumped from the windows while crowds watched from the streets below.
And the worst part?
Almost every part of this disaster was preventable.
This week, Jenn drags Jared through one of the deadliest industrial disasters in American history: the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire. Together they unravel:
- brutal factory conditions in 1911
- locked exit doors
- overcrowded work floors
- failed fire escapes
- the factory owners who walked free
- and how this tragedy changed labor laws forever
Also discussed:
- shirtwaists (the fashion, not the waistline)
- why sewing machines are apparently witchcraft
- corporate greed
- early labor movements
- and how “fireproof” absolutely did not mean what people thought it meant
Because sometimes the scariest stories aren’t mysteries.
Sometimes everybody already knows exactly what caused the deaths.
🎙️ Episode Credits
Hosted By: Jenn & Jared
Written & Researched By: Jenn
Produced By: The House of Syx (but we know it's Jenn)
Editing & Post Production: Also Jenn
Artwork & Visual Design: Obviously Jenn
📚 Episode Chapters
00:00:55 — Welcome Back to the House of Syx
00:03:01 — Factory Life in 1911
00:09:48 — Locked Doors and Fire Hazards
00:13:21 — The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory
00:22:40 — The Fire Begins
00:27:02 — Trapped on the Ninth Floor
00:33:02 — 146 Dead in Less Than 30 Minutes
00:35:15 — The Trial and Public Outrage
00:40:16 — Negligence, Laws, and Corporate Greed
🔎 Research & Sources
Historical & Primary Sources
📖 Recommended Book
🎥 Recommended Documentary
If you enjoyed this episode, follow the show, leave a review, and tell your friends that apparently “fireproof” used to mean “the building survives, good luck to everyone inside.”