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Program Information
Radio Curious
David Von Drehle
Interview
David Von Drehle & Barry Vogel, Esq.
 Radio Curious - Barry Vogel  Contact Contributor
Sept. 3, 2010, 3:46 p.m.
Until September 11, 2001, The Triangle Shirtwaste Fire on March 25, 1911 was the deadliest workplace disaster in the history of New York City. David Von Drehle, a political writer for the Washington Post, is the author of “Triangle, the Fire That Changed America.” It’s a detailed examination of how one event changed the course of the 20th century politics and labor relations.

All of the almost 400 half-hour archive editions on this website are free for you to enjoy, download, copy, share or rebroadcast as you wish. Please give credit to Radio Curious and let us know what you like about the program. www.radiocurious.org
Until September 11, 2001, The Triangle Shirtwaste Fire on March 25, 1911 was the deadliest workplace disaster in the history of New York City. The fire shocked the nation and exposed the life-threatening conditions in America’s sweatshop industry. It gave energy to the labor movement and unions, and remade the Democratic Party.

David Von Drehle, a political writer for the Washington Post is the author of “Triangle, the Fire That Changed America.” It’s a detailed examination of how one event changed the course of the 20th century politics and labor relations.

At the end of his book Von Drehle concludes that the workers who fought the management in 1909 and died in the fire of 1911, where they were locked in the building during the fire, did not die in vain.

I spoke with David Von Drehle by phone from New York City and asked him to tell us how that awful fire changed America.

The book he recommends “Plunkitt of Tammany Hall” by William Riordan.

Triangle, the Fire that Changed America Download Program Podcast
Von Drhele, David
00:29:00 1 Sept. 3, 2003
Ukiah, California
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 00:29:00  64Kbps mp3
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