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A short but impactful graphic novel about the women who worked in factories painting numbers on timepieces with radium laced paint.
A short but impactful graphic novel about the women who worked in factories painting numbers on timepieces with radium laced paint.
3 ⭐ This book is a general overall look at Frances Perkins life. How she was the first female, labor, secretary, and how she ushered in things such as minimum wages, Social Security, disability rights, etc. Labor movements today would be less if it was not for the work that Frances Perkins did years ago.
This book outlines the circumstances leading up to the 1911 Triangle Factory Fire, the event itself, and the aftermath, including laws requiring workplace safety measures we take for granted today. It's a good example of the purpose of government intervention when businesses refuse to protect employees and the public and of how easily elected officials can ignore the needs of those who lack political power.
"There was a stricken conscience of public guilt and we all felt that we had been wrong, that something was wrong with that building which we had accepted or the tragedy never would have happened."
Replace "building" with "system," and this is the reaction I hope we eventually feel about this pandemic.
Side note: I once dressed as Frances Perkins. She is a woman I admire for her steadfast commitment to speaking up for those often ignored.
“Clara listened to speech after speech. “
This is another book I would definitely use in my classroom. I would read it to my students to let them know it is okay to stand up for what you believe in and it is okay to be different and out there. It is a good book to show the kids to believe in themselves to stand up for their rights and to do the best thing.
This is a biography book. It is about an immigrant, Clara. When she arrived in America, she didn't speak any English, and she didn't know women had to work and how they traded an education for labor. She worked by day (shirtwaist factory) and studied at night time. She didn't accept that women were treated unfairly so she made a difference and stood up for what she believed in. The author's note has sources and facts to where she wrote the book.
“In America,
wrongs can be righted,
warriors can wear skirts and blouses,
and the bravest hearts
may beat in girls
only five feet tall.”
I will read this to my classroom to discuss the unfair conditions that women had to face and how Clara overcame them.
#Stacked 5mo