Our Visit to the Asch Building , and the Poems it Inspired

Screen Shot 2014-02-21 at 2.11.34 PM

Last week, our study of the the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory culminated with a visit to the former Asch building, located next to Washington Square Park. Here are some examples of the students’ poems that the visit inspired.

Protest
by Olivia Rose Bagan

I’m just a 10 year old girl

Walking
And walking
And walking.

On a hot summer day in April 5th on 1911
I walk past my old factory.
Burnt as it is.
Boring and burnt.
Till I see the other side.

100,000 women striking for better conditions in factories.
Yelling
And yelling.
I join them
Yelling
And yelling.

I hear sirens
Bee-do!
Bee-do!
Bee-do!

Police make their way through the crowd.
Breaking bones.
Crack!
Crack!
Crack!

I want to run.
But they finally reach me.
They grab me and everyone else
And shove us in a paddy wagon.

So warm.
People breathing down my neck.
Finally out.

Handcuffs around my wrists.
Click!
Six broken ribs
Ow!
Ow!
Ow!
Ow!
Ow!
Ow!

Thrown into a cell.
Locked.
I hear someone coming…
Click!
Click!
Click!

The union leader,
Bails me out.
I see Mama and Papa too!
I run.

Hugs,
Kisses,
Love,
Family.

Home:
Stuffy,
Warm,
Dirty,
Stinky.

But as long as I have my parents
I’m fine.
Because the most important thing in a family is:
LOVE.

THE END!

Untitled
by Cooper

Darkness emerges from the building.
Light then sorrow then pain.
Crack shatter boom.
Some live,
some die,
some are reborn,
some are undead.
So many things going straight through my head.
Again.    

Scene
by Zachary Cappadocia

Walking home
feeling bad
hearing screams
when seeing

seeing windows
big and small
but puffs of smoke
out to tall

seeing a firetruck
people fall
feel dry and
kind of small

black smoke finale
pouring through
people ran
very confused.

The Fire
by Polly

Loud people screaming
fire burning all around
a horrible place that is scary and weird,
146 people gone forever,
picketing people,
screams and shouts,
orange, red, yellow
fire, fire, fire
burn, burn, burn,
police,
oh-no,
gone.

News About News by Piper

 

WSJ photo

One LREI 4th grade class, DJ4, is studying newspapers. To learn more about them they went to the Wall Street Journal building. They learned so many things and some 4th graders told the reporters about the things they learned. They learned the backstory of the Wall Street Journal. Here are some of the things they learned.

The Wall Street Journal used to only be a newspaper that only wrote about business and finance things. Even though other people run the WSJ now, the founders were named Charles Dow and the other founder was named Edward Jones. Now the person who runs the WSJ is named William Lewis and he was only the head for about one week.

The Wall Street Journal has 1.4 million online subscribers. 2.3 million are print subscribers, there are too many subscribers that the 4th graders lost track. In the world there are there are 2000 reporters, but the reporters in New York there are 200. Olivia Bagan said, “This looks a lot like my mom’s office.” And a lot of the kids agree and thought it looked a lot like their parents offices too. The Wall Street Journal was founded in 1882. Now they collaborate with Barrons newspaper.

After the trip the 4th graders hoped this article would teach you some more about the Wall Street Journal. If you read other newspapers are you going to switch over? You should really go visit the WSJ. It is very fun.