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Reizel “Rosie” Brenman

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Reizel “Rosie” Brenman

Birth
Ukraine
Death
25 Mar 1911 (aged 22–23)
Greenwich Village, New York County, New York, USA
Burial
Staten Island, Richmond County, New York, USA Add to Map
Plot
Bezeur Ladies Circle, Sec G Map 32
Memorial ID
View Source
Triangle Shirtwaist Fire Victim. Although records from the time can be unreliable, I believe Rosie immigrated to the United States from the (then) Russian city of Sharovka, sometime between 1905 and 1908. Her younger brother Joseph got a job as an inside contractor at the Triangle Waist Company on the 9th floor of the Asch Building in New York City and, in that capacity, could hire sewing machine operators. In 1911, 23 year old Rosie (her given name was Reizel), along with her younger sister Sarah, was a seamstress seated at one of the rows of long wooden tables churning out the most popular ladies' garment of the period.

The company made women's blouses, known as "waists" or "shirtwaists", and it's workers were mostly recent immigrant German, Italian and European Jewish girls, some as young as 13 years old although older women, men and young boys were also represented. Their working conditions were far from safe. They worked 14 hour shifts among heaps of flammable bolts of fabric, scraps of which piled up in bins, baskets and on the floor around them; tissue paper patterns hung from racks above their worktables. The workrooms were lit by open flame gas lamps and the cutters, mostly men, were allowed to smoke as they worked. Brought on by a New York garment workers strike in 1910, many had joined the fledgling International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union. At the conclusion of the strike, most companies had signed agreements with the union improving working conditions. The Triangle Company, however, refused to sign and was under no obligation to abide by established safety rules.

On March 25, 1911, around 4:30pm, fire broke out on the 8th floor. Most on that floor and the executives on the 10th floor were able to escape, but workers on the 9th floor, who had not been alerted to the fire, found themselves trapped. Of the four 9th floor exits, the elevator was commandeered by 8th floor workers and then stopped working altogether, one stairwell door was soon blocked by fire and smoke, the other stairwell door had been locked (although denied by the owners in the trial held after, it was a common practice to lock factory workers in to prevent them from stealing) and the only fire escape proved too flimsy and collapsed under the weight of the escaping workers. Many died from being overcome by the smoke and flames quickly filling the building, but 62 of the workers realized there were no other means of escape and jumped from the windows to the pavement 9 stories below. Or worse, they were pushed toward the open windows by the panicked crowd and had no choice. Although the fire department responded quickly, the water from their hoses would not reach the top floors and ladders of the time were unable to reach above the 6th floor. By the time the fire was extinguished, 141 people had lost their lives. In the next few days, 5 more would die from their injuries.

From her documented injuries and cause of death, Rosie and her sister were overcome by the smoke and flames and never escaped the burning building, becoming one of nine pairs of siblings to die in the fire. Rosie's body was so badly damaged by the fire that identification could only be made through a dentist who recognized a filling he had placed in one of her back teeth. Her brother Joseph had been one of the first to notice the fire and, following his natural instinct to run, had escaped through the one unlocked door before the flames had spread. Remembering his sisters, he returned to the 9th floor to search for them, but was unable to find either Rosie or Sarah in the growing smoke and flames. In the end, he escaped via one of the elevators.

From the 1912 Report of the Red Cross Emergency Relief Committee, the Brenman sisters appear as Case #126: "Two sisters, 23 and 17 years old, were killed; their brother, 21, escaped without injury. There were also a brother, 27 years old, and a sister, 19, in New York. The father and two younger sisters were in Russia. The father was said to have "a very small trade in eggs" and to rely chiefly on the money sent him from America, which was about $160.00 a year. The surviving sister in New York was seriously affected physically by the shock. Assistance amounting in all to $175.00 was given to the sister to enable her to spend the summer in the country. $20.00 a month was sent to the father in Russia through the oldest son until October, and on November 14 a lump sum of $500.00 was sent in the same way."

The public outrage following the tragedy and subsequent acquittal of the company's owners paved the way for a flood of legislation to improve factory safety standards, led to the founding of The American Society of Safety Engineers and hastened the growth and clout of the International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union. A bystander who witnessed the young girls jumping from the windows was inspired to a life of public service fighting for the rights of factory workers; Frances Perkins went on to become the first woman appointed to a Presidential Cabinet position as Franklin Roosevelt's Secretary of Labor. The Triangle Shirtwaist Fire was the single worst workplace disaster in New York City until the attack on the World Trade Center in 2001.
Triangle Shirtwaist Fire Victim. Although records from the time can be unreliable, I believe Rosie immigrated to the United States from the (then) Russian city of Sharovka, sometime between 1905 and 1908. Her younger brother Joseph got a job as an inside contractor at the Triangle Waist Company on the 9th floor of the Asch Building in New York City and, in that capacity, could hire sewing machine operators. In 1911, 23 year old Rosie (her given name was Reizel), along with her younger sister Sarah, was a seamstress seated at one of the rows of long wooden tables churning out the most popular ladies' garment of the period.

The company made women's blouses, known as "waists" or "shirtwaists", and it's workers were mostly recent immigrant German, Italian and European Jewish girls, some as young as 13 years old although older women, men and young boys were also represented. Their working conditions were far from safe. They worked 14 hour shifts among heaps of flammable bolts of fabric, scraps of which piled up in bins, baskets and on the floor around them; tissue paper patterns hung from racks above their worktables. The workrooms were lit by open flame gas lamps and the cutters, mostly men, were allowed to smoke as they worked. Brought on by a New York garment workers strike in 1910, many had joined the fledgling International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union. At the conclusion of the strike, most companies had signed agreements with the union improving working conditions. The Triangle Company, however, refused to sign and was under no obligation to abide by established safety rules.

On March 25, 1911, around 4:30pm, fire broke out on the 8th floor. Most on that floor and the executives on the 10th floor were able to escape, but workers on the 9th floor, who had not been alerted to the fire, found themselves trapped. Of the four 9th floor exits, the elevator was commandeered by 8th floor workers and then stopped working altogether, one stairwell door was soon blocked by fire and smoke, the other stairwell door had been locked (although denied by the owners in the trial held after, it was a common practice to lock factory workers in to prevent them from stealing) and the only fire escape proved too flimsy and collapsed under the weight of the escaping workers. Many died from being overcome by the smoke and flames quickly filling the building, but 62 of the workers realized there were no other means of escape and jumped from the windows to the pavement 9 stories below. Or worse, they were pushed toward the open windows by the panicked crowd and had no choice. Although the fire department responded quickly, the water from their hoses would not reach the top floors and ladders of the time were unable to reach above the 6th floor. By the time the fire was extinguished, 141 people had lost their lives. In the next few days, 5 more would die from their injuries.

From her documented injuries and cause of death, Rosie and her sister were overcome by the smoke and flames and never escaped the burning building, becoming one of nine pairs of siblings to die in the fire. Rosie's body was so badly damaged by the fire that identification could only be made through a dentist who recognized a filling he had placed in one of her back teeth. Her brother Joseph had been one of the first to notice the fire and, following his natural instinct to run, had escaped through the one unlocked door before the flames had spread. Remembering his sisters, he returned to the 9th floor to search for them, but was unable to find either Rosie or Sarah in the growing smoke and flames. In the end, he escaped via one of the elevators.

From the 1912 Report of the Red Cross Emergency Relief Committee, the Brenman sisters appear as Case #126: "Two sisters, 23 and 17 years old, were killed; their brother, 21, escaped without injury. There were also a brother, 27 years old, and a sister, 19, in New York. The father and two younger sisters were in Russia. The father was said to have "a very small trade in eggs" and to rely chiefly on the money sent him from America, which was about $160.00 a year. The surviving sister in New York was seriously affected physically by the shock. Assistance amounting in all to $175.00 was given to the sister to enable her to spend the summer in the country. $20.00 a month was sent to the father in Russia through the oldest son until October, and on November 14 a lump sum of $500.00 was sent in the same way."

The public outrage following the tragedy and subsequent acquittal of the company's owners paved the way for a flood of legislation to improve factory safety standards, led to the founding of The American Society of Safety Engineers and hastened the growth and clout of the International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union. A bystander who witnessed the young girls jumping from the windows was inspired to a life of public service fighting for the rights of factory workers; Frances Perkins went on to become the first woman appointed to a Presidential Cabinet position as Franklin Roosevelt's Secretary of Labor. The Triangle Shirtwaist Fire was the single worst workplace disaster in New York City until the attack on the World Trade Center in 2001.

Inscription

Here is buried
Rachel, daughter of Yechiel,
died 28 Adar 5671.
May their souls be bound up in the bond of (eternal) life.



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  • Maintained by: TomDuse
  • Originally Created by: Jennifer
  • Added: May 18, 2005
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/10986955/reizel-brenman: accessed ), memorial page for Reizel “Rosie” Brenman (1888–25 Mar 1911), Find a Grave Memorial ID 10986955, citing Baron Hirsch Cemetery, Staten Island, Richmond County, New York, USA; Maintained by TomDuse (contributor 46954032).