Will your shopping for gifts this holy season include buying apparel? Be warned: It will be difficult to find clean clothes. Some are hopelessly stained with child labor, even slavery. Most have flaws like sweatshop wages, dangerous working conditions, wage theft, harassment and more.
In
recent years some consumers have shown interest in healthier food. The slow food movement has even reached the
menus within the biggest fast food chains. Now a slow fashion movement is budding. For example, you can purchase
clean jeans from Blue Delta in Oxford, Mississippi. There is an Ivy League
educated woman in Tennessee who is doing well growing and selling indigo
domestically. About 700 cotton farms in South Carolina practice re-shoring; that is, growing stateside and
supplying manufacturers here. Even a few well-known apparel brands are
gradually turning away from sweatshops.
It
is likely too late to get into slow fashion purchasing before Wednesday, December
25, 2019. However, Advent (also called the Journey Outward) is an appropriate
time for solid reading on the topic of clothing. In Beaten Down, Worked Up (Alfred Knopf, 2019) Steven Greenhouse gives
two thorough chapters to the history of U.S. apparel manufacturing.
In
the early 1900s Triangle Shirtwaist Factory was a premier manufacturer of
affordable women’s blouses. It occupied the top three floors of New York City’s
Asch Building (now known as Brown Building and owned by N.Y. University). In November
1909 the women there and in other factories staged a strike. Aided by Women’s
Trade Union League and by International Ladies Garment Worker Union and for a
time by a few wealthy women called Mink Coat Brigade, the Triangle workers held
out for over two months. Their demands were modest: Managers must stop “yelling
at them, threatening them or harassing them” plus a change in the pay system--from
a set amount per day, no matter the number of hours to an hourly wage. When
they settled, the Triangle workers got a small raise and a 52-hour week. They
did not get the first goal of every worker action: sole and exclusive
bargaining rights. Nor was workplace safety part of the outcome.
Beaten Down, Worked Up profiles Clara Lemlich Shavelson
(1886-1982). She was 23-years old in those last weeks of 1909. She emerged as a
leader of the garment workers. At a crowded union meeting held in Cooper Union
she pushed her way to the front and shouted: “I am tired of listening to
speakers who talk in general terms. I move that we go on a general strike.” Her
activism continued through her life. She pioneered the tactic of consumer
boycott and started tenants’ groups in her neighborhood. In her 80s Lemlich
Shavelson lived in a senior facility. Sure enough, she organized the nurses and
aides. With these working conditions “you’d be crazy not to join a union,” she
told the workers.
Beaten Down, Worked Up goes on to detail a devastating
fire at Triangle Company that occurred in March 1911. After just 18 minutes,
144 people were dead.
Before
1900, it might be noted, there was no such thing as fashion in our country;
except among the elites in Virginia and elsewhere along the Atlantic coast who
took cues from Europe. There was no “off the rack” shopping for working women
and men (only standard issue uniforms or homemade clothes). Only with mass
production of apparel and other products in the 20th century could
working-class people have an interest in and be able to afford fashion. The
Triangle Company, like many other shops, cut and assembled stylish shirts; the beginning
of what today is called fast fashion.
Of course, the main ingredient in the early 1900s as with nearly all garments
today was cheap labor. An exploitative wage system was and is justified.
Beaten Down, Worked Up then profiles a witness to the
Triangle Company tragedy: Frances Perkins (1880-1965), an Episcopalian. She was
in a nearby café, on break from her position with National Consumers League (www.nclnet.org). Her friend was Florence Kelley
(1859-1932), a Quaker and the first general secretary of Co
If
you have ever drawn overtime pay, ever collected an unemployment check, ever
benefited from Social Security, ever been thankful for safety features at your
job site, it is because of the tireless efforts of Perkins. After her time with
the Consumers League, she worked for New York State and then became the first
woman cabinet member, serving through all of President Franklin Roosevelt’s
terms. She was compelled to improve conditions for working families by the
imprint of the horrible Triangle Company tragedy.
How is it that all our clothes come from
Asia or Latin America? Might President Donald Trump revive apparel
manufacturing in the U.S.? Is there something we can do about dirty clothing
even during these short days before Christmas? To be continued with information drawn from Fashionapolis
by Dana Thomas (Penguin, 2019).
Droel
edits a print newsletter of faith and work for National Center for the Laity
(PO Box 291102, Chicago, IL 60629).
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