The labor movement was a movement that took a lot of unsuccess. The labor movement took place in the 19th century. Before the era, workers had been working 16 hours a day making less than 1 dollar for that day. It was a complete capitalist system. If you were on top of the ladder, you would never fall because you would have to pay your workers practically nothing. This is what made the movement so important, it lowered wages and made working conditions better. The only problem was that leading up to the change, there was a lot of loss and unsuccess. Many of the strikes, including but not limited to, the Shirtwaist Strike, the Homestead Strike and even the Knights of Labor strike all failed but despite all of the unsuccess it helped make the movement as a whole a success. …show more content…
The Shirtwaist Strike happened because the workers at the shirtwaist company had terrible conditions. They made $2 a day maximum and that’s not factoring in the fact that they have to pay for the needles and materials that they use and even the electricity. Max Blanck and Isaac Harris owned the shirtwaist factory and was responsible for all of this.5 When the employees decided to strike it was terrible, people wouldn’t even look their way because they didn’t care. They thought that everything they were doing was nonsense. It took 100 deaths for people to notice them. The strike took the lives of 100 people who were just standing up for themselves and in the end, they still didn’t get what they wanted and that’s why I say that the strike was