Sewing station chair

Description:

This chair was used in a suburban El Monte, California sweatshop as part of a sewing machine workstation seen in object 1996.0292.29a . The chair was seized during a well-publicized 1995 sweatshop raid and is part of a larger Smithsonian collection of artifacts documenting apparel industry sweatshops, focusing on the El Monte operation.

On August 2, 1995, police officers raided a fenced seven-unit apartment complex in El Monte, California. They arrested eight operators of a clandestine garment sweatshop and freed 72 workers who were being forced to sew garments in virtual captivity. Smuggled from Thailand into the United States, the laborers’ plight brought a national spotlight to domestic sweatshop production and resulted in increased enforcement by federal and state labor agencies. The publicity of the El Monte raid also put added pressure on the apparel industry to reform its labor and business practices domestically and internationally.

Date Made: 1974 - 1995

See more items in: Work and Industry: Mechanical and Civil Engineering, El Monte, Work, Sweatshops, Many Voices, One Nation

Exhibition:

Exhibition Location:

Credit Line: State of California. Department of Industrial Relations. Division of Labor Standards Enforcement

Data Source: National Museum of American History

Id Number: 1996.0292.28BAccession Number: 1996.0292Catalog Number: 1996.292.28B

Object Name: Chair

Physical Description: metal (overall material)vinyl (overall material)Measurements: overall: 33 1/2 in x 17 1/4 in x 21 1/2 in; 85.09 cm x 43.815 cm x 54.61 cm

Guid: http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ng49ca746b4-ac26-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa

Record Id: nmah_1214478

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