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UNTIL TIME ERASES YOU by David Gordon

UNTIL TIME ERASES YOU

A Tragedy of Love, Loss, and Courage in the Shadow of the Triangle Factory

by David Gordon

Pub Date: Dec. 27th, 2023
ISBN: 9781304812421
Publisher: Lulu.com

Gordon presents a fictional account of the devastating 1911 Triangle Waist Company fire.

Catherine Tassone immigrates to New York City at age 15 in 1906 to support her family after their home in San Giuseppe, Italy, is devastated by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius. Seventeen-year-old Jacob Brosky moves to the city the same year from the Pale of Settlement region of Russia after his family is murdered in a pogrom. Black Americans Sarah Johnson and her husband, Will, own and live in a store in the city’s Hester Street Market and bear the scars of local race riots six years before. These characters’ lives intersect in unexpected ways as they live and work in Manhattan tenements and sweatshops. Catherine and Jacob are both employed at the Triangle Waist Company, owned by Max Blanck and Isaac Harris, themselves immigrants, who “pinched every penny and sweated every employee to control costs and maximize profits.” The factory is on the eighth through tenth floors of the newly built Asch Building at Washington Place and Greene Street, across from the Johnsons’ store. It’s also a firetrap, crowded with people, clothing-manufacturing machines, and flammable materials. Michael McMahon is a young firefighter who regularly saves people from burning tenements; as he and Catherine become romantically involved, the dangerous working and financial conditions at Triangle come into sharper focus, culminating in the tragic fire on March 25, 1911. Gordon effectively interweaves accounts of the lives of people who lived and died on the fateful day of the fire with details of New York City political movements of the early 1900s. This absorbing, educational read particularly considers unions’ progress in organizing for better wages and working conditions in the garment industry, as well as the machinations of the notorious Tammany Hall political machine. The novel also features vivid descriptions; at one point, for instance, a reporter asks a firefighter, “What will you remember most about this awful day?” After a moment, the rescuer responds, “Today. . .it rained children.”

An ambitious and well-rendered tale of early 1900s New York.