Illinois
Related: About this forumThe Radium Girls: An Illinois Tragedy
I'm clearing out old email. I had a thread about this topic a month or so ago. I'll have to find that thread.
By KATIE BUCK JAN 25, 2018
Part 1: Radium poisoning took the lives of perhaps thousands of female factory workers, many in Ottawa, Illinois, in the last century.
She was among the last of her kind, but longevity in this club was a mixed blessing. On August 25, 1959, Beatrice Workman died of radium poisoning. The 54-year-old Park Ridge, Illinois resident had worked in the 1920s at the Ottawa, Illinois Radium Dial Company, which hired women to paint watch and clock dials with radium-laced, glow-in-the-dark paint. Workman first experienced pain in 1936, but doctors told her it was arthritis. "The real source of her trouble wasn't found until she was examined at Presbyterian-St. Luke's Hospital," the August 27, 1959 Rockford Register-Republic reported. That was 21 years later.
There were likely thousands of dial painters who died from radium poisoning, although there's no definite number, according to Kate Moore, author of the 2017 book, The Radium Girls: The Dark Story of America's Shining Women. Besides the Ottawa plant, the women had worked at radium companies in New York, Connecticut and New Jersey. Most died young, decades before Workman.
That included many women in Illinois. Some of the Ottawa painters, despite their long, agonizing illnesses with crippling sarcomas, crumbling jawbones, crushed spines, amputated limbs and other maladies, were among the luckier ones. Because of Illinois' progressive workers' compensation laws, some of the Radium Dial workers received financial awards.
"Illinois was one of the earliest adopters of workers compensation law in 1911. The final state to adopt it was Mississippi in 1948," says Russell Lewis, executive vice president and chief historian of the Chicago History Museum. Illinois' law led to the creation of the Illinois Industrial Commission in 1917, and it was this body that sided with one of Ottawa's most well-known dial painters in 1938. Although dial painters in other states sought retribution for their fatal illnesses, those in Ottawa were the only ones "to win state sanctioned compensation for radium poisoning," wrote Claudia Clark in Radium Girls: Women and Industrial Health Reform, 1910-1935.
In the 1920s, watch advertisements touted the wonderful radium dials that let owners tell time in the dark. They became top sellers and production ramped up. Radium Dial hired women, girls mostly some as young as 11 and 13 according to Moore's book to paint the watch dials. Precision was key, so the girls were taught to create a fine point of the paintbrush bristles with their lips. With each lick, they ingested radium.
Their bosses said the paint wouldn't hurt them. They told the girls it would make them beautiful. The radium became a toy.
{snip}
Newest Reality
(12,712 posts)When this was posted awhile back, I noted that my Grandmother was one of those Radium Girls and the outcome was rather horrific.
LenaBaby61
(6,991 posts)I can imagine how horrific her demise was, considering it was pure radium they were handling and painting their faces up with. The agony physically that these young ladies went through ... Yeah 😪
I remember seeing an update about this whole situation about 10 or so years ago, and a guy dressed in a protective suit went to the huge fiend where the clock company once stood with a radium detector, and the levels of radium STILL remaining on the spot where the clock company stood were STILL off the charts. Even in the surrounding areas of streets surrounding the land was still filled with lower-levels of radium. 6 decades later there's probably still radium on the spot and surrounding areas where that clock company of DEATH and DECEPTION stood.
dewsgirl
(14,964 posts)I'm really surprised a movie hasn't been made about their story
LenaBaby61
(6,991 posts)I remember reading about this story years ago.
Here's a snippet:
Many of the young girls working there at the clock company were painting their hair, faces, noses, teeth, with pure radium so they'd glow in the dark for kicks, because they thought it was a fun thing to do, and also because they were told that radium wouldn't hurt them.
Too bad they didn't read about nor know about Madame Curie. But then again, they were making good money and providing for their families during the Depression so they let the Radium flow.
Years later as a result of radium poisoning, YIKES.
CaptYossarian
(6,448 posts)which is usually when kids learn about Madame Curie. It sounds like they never attended HS because of the Depression, so they instead worked to help the family.
The Roaring 20s had a great amount of income inequality. Guess what our future holds now?
LenaBaby61
(6,991 posts)Yeah, they probably were too young to know anything about who Marie Curie was or about her contributions to science. My sister-in-law, who married my brother in the late 1960's taught me a lot about science and about Curie/The Radium poisoning she died from when I was a little girl, which is probably not the norm. My sister-in-law is 74 and retired, and I'm 58, and she's STILL sending me science-related information 🤭 That's why I love her so much. She's still a self-described Geek at her age.
As for what our future holds: Unless we get King tRump out of there before he completes another stolen 4 years in office, this country will not be the America we knew pre-tRumputin & tRumputinthuglicans and before the POP: Party of putin's arrival. It'll be a rapidly-deteriorating Banana Republic, with NO rule of law, NO safety net for the poor/sick/disenfranchised, and a PERMANENT party, the POP, running things forever. People talk a lot about Skid-Row here in California (Downtown Los Angeles), but this country nation-wide will be mirroring that. putin doesn't follow rules, and tRump will be on steroids if he's allowed to be the lawless, insane he is.
I keep telling myself that in the "Universe" WON'T allow the POP/orange, treasonous, putin-butt-kissing, racist, obese, menace to destroy our world which is EXACTLY what those wrecking-balls are doing.
Boxerfan
(2,533 posts)I tinker with old pocket watches. I had a very grungy movement with a very badly damaged hand & dial set. Once I removed the dial to service the watch I found small markings on the back.
"Healy
11/25
Radium
Illinois"
This is clearly inscribed and almost unique. I'm very sure she would have been fired if she was caught signing a dial. I think it was her way of saying hello to a future she knew she wouldn't see.
I may have the face restored but now it sits in my display cabinet with my better watches. The face is almost illegible and dials are common so a replacement was found for the movement. There is still radium on the dials but kept i a sealed bag it is harmless. A restorer would e equipped to deal with the hazard.
3Hotdogs
(13,403 posts)Then an image of your food would appear on a piece of paper. This was to tell the shoe store what correction your feet needed. Problem was, the store had no stock to correct any deformation. It was just for show.
Then, came the radium paint. You could buy it in hardware stores. I got some to paint the wall plate on the light switch in my bedroom so's I could find it at night. I don't remember what else I painted. That was in the 1950s.
There was also a radium site in West Orange N.J. that later became a superfund.
CaptYossarian
(6,448 posts)Nobody knew about the dangers and the companies only bragged up the benefits.
mahatmakanejeeves
(60,972 posts)Wednesday, November 27, 2019:
Dark Lives Of 'The Radium Girls' Left A Bright Legacy For Workers, Science