Tristan's writings and her personal contact with worker activists across France influenced the social struggles around the period of the
revolutions of 1848. After her death, her followers tried to implement her plans for a Workers' Union, with little success. But her influence was key in the 1845 strike at the
Toulon arsenal, a key moment in the story of French
labour movement. According to the French historian
Maurice Agulhon, Tristan's visit to Toulon during her travels radicalised its workers, contributing to the gestation of the strike. French workers placed a monument on her tomb in October 1848, in the wake of the
French Revolution of 1848, with close to eight thousand workers marking the occasion by marching to her grave singing a song from ''The Workers' Union''. Seeing the failure of the promises of
capitalism, Tristan wrote from a deep desire for social progress—combining the women's struggle with socialism. Tristan highlighted themes and ideas that give primacy to
worker's rights. She was the first one to conceive the idea that the
emancipation of the proletariat would be the synthesis of the people's struggle against the
bourgeoisie. Tristan was “the first woman to try to merge the proto-feminist and social
discourses into a critical synthesis, opening the way leading for the future shape of feminism of a
proletarian class character, which finds it inconceivable that there exist oppressed women who are capable of oppressing other women”. She organized the fragmented ideas of women's equality at that time, brought by the
French Revolution, providing a platform for the later rise of
first wave feminism in the late 19th century. == References ==