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Twelve-hour shifts. Temperatures reaching 2,900 degrees Fahrenheit. No safety regulations. In 1900, America’s steel mills didn't just produce metal—they consumed men. In this documentary, we go inside the gates of the Homestead, South Works, and Edgar Thomson mills to uncover the brutal reality of the Industrial Revolution. This isn't the story of Andrew Carnegie or J.P. Morgan; this is the story of the thousands of Slavic, Italian, and Polish immigrants who worked the "Long Turn"—24 hours straight—to feed the furnaces that built the Empire State Building and the Brooklyn Bridge. From Bessemer converters that erupted like volcanoes to the rolling mills where one slip meant death, we explore how men survived on 16 cents an hour and why the phrase "Old age at 40" became a terrifying reality for the steelworker. In this video, we cover: The Furnace Floor: What it felt like to work in 130-degree heat while breathing toxic sulfur and coal smoke. The Economics of Survival: How families lived on $1.65 a day in the slums of Pittsburgh. The Dangers: The horrifying truth about the Bessemer process and why accidents were considered "business decisions." The Law: How the legal doctrine of "Assumption of Risk" protected billionaires and left injured workers with nothing. The Legacy: Why every skyscraper in New York is a monument to the men who died building it. Every bridge is a monument. Every skyscraper is a gravestone. This is the true cost of the American Century. SUBSCRIBE TO THE CHANNEL If you enjoy these gritty historical documentaries, please support the channel by subscribing and liking the video. It helps us bring more of these forgotten stories to light. LET US KNOW IN THE COMMENTS Would you have walked through those gates for 15 cents an hour to feed your family?