— Kim KellyBlanck and Harris collected insurance money for the burned building, and raked in $60,000 more than the fire had cost them in damages—netting them the equivalent of $400 per victim. In 1913, the pair reached a settlement with the victims’ families, paying out one week’s wages for each dead worker—or roughly $6 for each lost life. Later
Replicated under Fair Use from Fight Like Hell: The Untold History of American Labor by Kim Kelly.