University Commemorates the Triangle Shirtwaist Fire

St. John's Alumni Summer 2011 Magazine

It’s one of New York City’s most tragic disasters, an accident that cut short the lives of 146 garment workers, many of whom were young, immigrant women.

To mark the 100th anniversary of the Triangle Shirtwaist Fire, St. John’s University hosted a number of events in March across the Queens, Staten Island and Manhattan campuses. From lectures to debates, film screenings to vigils, these programs allowed students to explore the history and cultural ramifications of this pivotal moment in American history.

St. John's Alumni Summer 2011 Magazine

University Provost Julia Upton, RSM, Ph.D., ’73G, ’75G played an instrumental role in planning these commemorative events.

“It has been called ‘The fire that changed America,’” she noted. “But I wonder how much it changed us. The fire fueled the international labor movement and many fire safety laws have been enacted as a result of that tragedy. But have sweatshops vanished? Does social justice pervade the workplace in America now? Those are the questions I continue to ask a century later.”

The planning for this anniversary began three years ago when, as incoming freshmen, the class of 2011 was asked to read Triangle, Katherine Weber’s fictionalized novel about the last survivor of the Shirtwaist Fire. Since then, Dr. Upton and other administrators worked with the St. John’s community to develop creative programs to commemorate the tragedy’s centennial.

The Queens campus hosted events that dealt with many of today’s most pressing political issues. Marc Lacey, a New York Times writer who runs the newspaper’s Phoenix Bureau, delivered a lecture entitled “Immigration: The Hot-Button Topic of our Times,” describing present-day border issues and how the immigration debate has evolved since 1911.

St. John's Alumni Summer 2011 Magazine

Other programs dealt with labor laws. Rev. James J. Maher, C.M. ’84C, Executive Vice President for Mission and Student Services, delivered a lecture entitled “Then and Now: Fair Labor Conditions in a Global Context.” He discussed contemporary global labor issues in the footwear and apparel industries, focusing on the challenges that remain and the need for continued vigilance. Afterwards, the St. John’s Debate Team and a visiting team from Morocco held a public debate pertaining to the topics raised in Fr. Maher’s presentation, arguing whether or not consumers are responsible for poor labor conditions.

“I think this debate was the best thing we have done for this campus,” said Stephen Llano, Assistant Professor of Rhetoric and Director of Debate. “The debate was excellent, the arguments were high quality and the students spoke eloquently.”

The Staten Island campus also hosted programs, including a lecture and book signing by Dr. Richard Greenwald, Dean of Drew University and author of The Triangle Fire, the Protocols of Peace and Industrial Democracy: In Progressive Era New York. The Manhattan campus, meanwhile, featured a Triangle Fire Documents and Artifacts Exhibit on display in the Davis Library.