Stuff You Should Know - The Radium Girls
Episode Date: July 13, 2021The Radium Girls painted watched with glow-in-the-dark radium in the 1920s and '30s. Most got sick, many died. This is their story. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetw...ork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey friends when you're staying at an Airbnb you might be like me wondering could my place be an Airbnb and if it could what could it earn?
So I was pretty surprised to hear about Lisa in Manitoba who got the idea to Airbnb the backyard guest house over childhood home now
The extra income helps pay her mortgage. So yeah, you might not realize it
But you might have an Airbnb to find out what your place could be earning at air bnb.ca
Slash host hey, I'm Lance Bass host of the new I hard podcast frosted tips with Lance Bass
Do you ever think to yourself?
What advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation if you do you've come to the right place?
Because I'm here to help and a different hot sexy teen crush boy bander each week to guide you through life
Tell everybody yeah, everybody
About my new podcast and make sure to listen so we'll never ever have to say bye bye bye
Listen to frosted tips with the Lance Bass on the I heart radio app Apple podcast or wherever you listen to podcasts
Welcome to stuff you should know a production of I heart radio
Hey and welcome to the podcast, I'm Josh Clark. There's Charles W. COVID Bryant
Why? Do you want me to to intro you like that Chuck?
Well, I guess the cat's out of the bag. Yeah, we wanted to start this episode off with a PSA
I've COVID everybody and the reason I'm making this so public is a couple of reasons
One to remind everyone that we're not out of the woods yet. I'm vaccinated fully
Mm-hmm. This is almost 100% likely the Delta variant. There's no way to prove that because
I've done a lot of research there. They're only testing for variants in like specific places than using
Statistics to like blow that out to the whole
Mm-hmm, but it is the it just like this week
It was breaking news that it dropped from about 90%
the vaccine effective to
64% against the Delta variant. Yeah, I mean that would that alone would make me suspect. That's what it is
Yeah, and it's the most dominant strain. It's the most likely to bust the vaccine
Mm-hmm. I went out of town over the weekend with friends and like 40% of that group have COVID now
So and they were vaxxed so oh my god. It is no joke everyone. We're not out of the woods
Please keep taking it seriously. Please get vaccinated
Vaccinated if you haven't and if you can use this, I know we're probably preaching to the choir mainly but if you can use this example
To try and convince someone you love to get vaccinated that is hesitant then that's why I'm saying this
Well, Chuck, I know Jerry would never come on and say this but we're very very glad that you're doing okay
And we love you very much. We're very proud of you Jerry doesn't express herself emotionally like that. No, she does not like you do
No, I'm well known for that kind of thing
But the good news and the final reason I mention it is also get vaccinated because it is doing at least part of its job in that
I had a couple of days of feeling pretty bad with a cold and
Have had four days now of feeling pretty good and it is it is doing its job and keeping it very mild and
I
Tick off a couple of categories where if I wasn't vaccinated it may not be so mild. Yeah, you know that that's why you're L
You CK why you ain't got no alibi you lucky. All right. Well now we can talk about
Some not so lucky
Young women
That's true. I'm hats off to you for that PSA to by the way. Sure. I never finished. I never finished Chuck
There's Jerry Jerome Roland over there right right stuff. You should know that's right
So now you can take over my former duties of introing the episode. Well, I mean, it's just funny
this is another not funny, but I feel like we are diving more and more into
sort of the horrors of
Not only just the workplace, but I feel like we've covered a lot more over the past couple of years
these situations in America's history where
corporations have tried to just
Bury things that made them look bad at the expense and the lives of people that work for them
Yeah, we've been examining how terrible life is without government regulations. That's right another PSA
It's true. And like you said, we're talking about some unfortunate women who
Were gravely mistreated in part because of like the the the place in time that they occupied
But also because they were women and because there were again, no workplace safety laws or anything like that
But they despite, you know everything that was stacked against them including things like their gender
they they
Basically rose up and in established some of the first successful lawsuits
Against employers for basically workplace abuse or at the very least workplace
their election of duty yeah of the employer to
Look out for worker safety. I think that's the technical way to put it. Yeah, and you know, we're talking about the radium girls and
There was a movie about this. It's not we loved the hundreds of emails about the ghost of
How do you pronounce it again? The brotherhood of the beast brotherhood of the wolf
That's right was the name of the movie and apparently on the only yeah, the only person who has never seen that movie
Yeah, same here and same here like I think we are the only two
I I don't I can't remember getting more emails about a single thing than that one
Yeah, they're literally still coming in and I I do remember once I saw the trailer
I was like, oh, I know that movie a little bit, but I didn't know the story
But there was a radium girls movie from three years ago that I sort of half watched today
It's
I don't want to I don't want to disparage anyone because
Filmmakers tried to get the word out about an important event in history
But I'll just say that the Roger Ebert comm website gave it one and a half stars and that's the only thing I'll say
Out of how many stars?
100
Wow, it was not very good. You got a one and a half percent. That is wow. Yeah, I did not watch that one
I haven't read the book yet either but one of the problems with taking up something like this is like
It was the same thing with Henry at a lax when we did our episode of killer cells
Where it's it's really hard to kind of dig past the wall of journalism
Surrounding like the release of a popular book. Yeah
And anything that is written in that book and that books take on the story all of that stuff
basically becomes
It like that's it. That's that's just that that's this person said this and this person played this role
And you know, it just becomes like the the story
I guess is what I'm trying to say
Fortunately for radium girls and and I'm not taking away from Kate Moore's book at all from everything
I've seen it was extremely well researched and like it did a really great job of bringing this to the to the forefront here
But fortunately, there's also like a lot of scholarship
Scholarship that was written and can in researched before that that still exists on the internet
So you can kind of like get into some other details too besides well the book said this and the book said that right
Also, fortunately, we had our buddy Dave ruse help us out with some research too and Dave hates books
He does he's always burning books. No Dave in fact is the one that said we should definitely mention
Kate Moore's 2017 book the radium girls
colon
That we should have a sound effect for colons now
What if we had like one of those in studio courses that go colon or colon?
Be great. Okay. We need a barbershop quartet. Yeah, that'd be good
The radium girls insert sound effect the dark story of America's shining women
Yes, I'm not sure if I like that pun
But yeah, not one but two puns the dark story America's shining women. Yeah, there it is
Yeah, so the whole thing about radium and and the radium girls and that's what the press dubbed them
They also I believe called themselves the
Society of the living dead which is some pretty serious gallows humored considering like the state and shape that they were in
They they were
They kind of came out of this era where radium like the 19 teens the early
1920s the first the first radium girls are actually two sets as we'll see but they came out as era where
Was there three? Yeah, there was another factory that we're not even gonna have time to talk about
Okay. Well, let's say there's what what decade was that one? I think it was the same decade
I think it was just another factory that you know, we just can't do the two-hour show. I got you
So they well, we're well on our way already
But they existed in a in an era where radium was seen as this thing that was just this amazing
Cure all tonic a wonder of nature that was
Put in all sorts of different
Products from cigarettes to condoms to there's a water called ratatouille. That was
Irradiated water that radioactive water that you would drink
To get the radioactivity in your body because it was you know thought to give you like health energy
Vitalization cure all sorts of diseases. It said that it bathed the stomach and liquid sunshine
and all of this was pretty new stuff because it wasn't
More than two decades before that Marie Curie and Pierre Curie
Um discovered radium in the first place back in 1898. Yeah, I mean they discovered it and I think they even named it
I think Latin radius means ray and they knew that it emitted rays of energy even at that time and
You know are very early on they started using radiation to try and help treat cancer
Like hey, let's put this in a lead box and cut a hole in it and then put that hole over
Over the human body like aiming it toward where a tumor might be like very obviously rudimentary stuff
And you have to make a beep beep
Sound the whole time that was kind of one of the roles of the technician at the time. That's right and you should have seen the audition tapes
Some people had zero rhythm. It'd be like beep beep. Sorry. You're well qualified, but
Uh so Curie actually she died
In 1934 from a plastic anemia, which is a bone marrow disorder caused by radiation exposure
so they knew that it was dangerous and
But it was still like like you said it was in the you know, it was known as a cure for the living dead in that Radithora water
mm-hmm and I
Mean basically used for everything from gout to fatigue and it was just one of those crazy times in American history where now
We look back and we're like this is just nuts
But yeah, and they didn't know
Well, so there were two tacks from what I could tell there was the beginnings of academic scholarship and both of the Curie's
Had some sort of suspicion and there was this idea that there was
Easily you could be exposed to too much. You didn't want to have too much radium
But a little bit was good for you
But then there was also this academic tack that was like no this stuff might not be good at all
Like we should really be careful with this
But the popular the popular idea of it
Yeah, you read in the newspapers or you know, maybe even what your doctor thought about it
All came from radium research that was almost exclusively underwritten and in a lot of cases
Carried out by companies that made their money off of radium like they were just touting this stuff as a an amazing wonder
element basically and and so there was like almost these two
Overlapping worlds that weren't connected at the time in our understanding of radium and like the 19 teens in 1920s
right so one of the other kind of cool and interesting things about radium is that it can make things glow in the dark and
And glow in the dark is very sort of like who cares now still kind of fun
But in the 1920s glow in the dark was a very big deal
It was basically the future and kind of space age and if you had a glow-in-the-dark watch or a glow-in-the-dark clock
Then you felt pretty cool basically because you could see that thing in the dark and so of course these companies
Wanted to start painting watch faces and clocks with radium and they've got young women and sometimes
Even girls as young as like 14 years old to do this stuff. Yeah, I think the first company at first
They were working on military clocks and military dials like you might put in an airplane or something and the first
Company, I think that was established to do this was United States radium back in 1916 in New Jersey
Orange, New Jersey, I think and like you said they hired young girls very very young girls
I think the oldest one I saw by far was 28, but for the most part they were in their
teens to early early 20s and
This was like a really big deal job like that was very highly paying. I think they were in the women who painted
Radium or watch dials with radium paint. We're in the top 5% of earners in America at the time
This is a factory job. Yeah, and then also is prestigious too from what I saw. Yeah, the movies and you know
I don't know if it's accurate or not. I'm gonna say what the movie said the movie said that they were paid a penny per face
And a high earner could crank out 200 a day. So that's about two two dollars a day
Okay, so that's like a million dollars today. I think that's also what the movie said well a million dollars
Double that and that's about what a gram of radium cost
Yeah, and today's dollars that is I think it was like a hundred grand a gram in the 1920s for a gram of radium
So they were they were they were themselves highly paid
But they also were working with what was at the time the most expensive material on earth
And it makes sense that it would be so expensive like radium is really rare
It's super radioactive, but it's really it occurs in very small amounts
Which kind of lets you realize how radioactive it is that you know
It's a daughter isotope of uranium whereas uranium decays one of the things that it becomes is is radium
And in uranium ore, I think the curies when they first
Discovered radium they they they found that after they took uranium out of this ore pitch blend
Which we talked about in the uranium mining episode that the pitch blend was still
Radioactive so like what else is in here and out of ten tons of
Uranium ore they managed to extract one milligram
So it would make sense especially at the time that it would cost a couple million dollars for a single gram of that stuff
Yeah, and so these girls and young women were
This stuff was getting in their hair. It was getting on their clothes
It was sort of a badge of honor because you would go out that night on dancing or something and you would glow a little bit
They would even purposely put it on their teeth sometimes
they were called ghost girls and
it was it was
It wasn't a fad in that it was widespread because only a select few like had their hands on it
But I think that's one of the reason the girls like these jobs is because they could go out and like
Attract attention because they had this glow in their hair and on their dresses
Yeah, I think also people knew that they were working with radium and radium at the time was like
Missy Elliott mixed with ecstasy back in the late 90s like as cool as it got you know what I mean goodness
Yeah, thanks. I'm just trying out some new stuff. How's it going? It's good
In fact, I think maybe we should take a break. I need to re-examine that analogy so I can really fully grasp it
You just let it sink in buddy
Hey, I'm Lance Bass host of the new iHeart podcast frosted tips with Lance Bass
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when questions arise or times get tough or you're at the end of the road
Okay, I see what you're doing. Do you ever think to yourself?
What advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation if you do?
You've come to the right place because I'm here to help this. I promise you oh god, seriously
I swear and you won't have to send an SOS because I'll be there for you
Oh, man, and so will my husband Michael. Um, hey, that's me. Yep. We know that Michael and a different hot sexy teen crush
Boyband or each week to guide you through life step by step not another one
Kids relationships life in general can get messy. You may be thinking this is the story of my life
Just stop now if so tell everybody ya
Everybody about my new podcast and make sure to listen so we'll never ever have to say bye bye bye
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart radio app Apple podcast or wherever you listen to podcasts
So Chuck I got to say before we start back again, you don't seem like you have COVID are you faking?
I'm not faking. I am a little spacey though
You're doing great. I mean you've researched an episode of stuff
You should know probably the most challenging podcast on the planet
Yeah, sure, and you're presenting it like just like an ace so hats off to you again. Well, thanks, man
you got it so
You were saying before that the radium girls were covered in
Radioactive dust yeah, and they were because they would mix their own paint
And they worked with a specific kind of paint called undark. It was a proprietary blend where they would mix them
They would basically mix it with water and a little bit of solvent and create their own paint from this radium dust
So radium dust was like all over the place, which is bad enough
You know you can get pretty radioactive from being exposed to radio radium dust like that
But it was far far worse in those working conditions because they were actually
Ingesting the radium through the paint as well. Yeah, I mean this is where if you think this already sounds like a workplace violation
This is where it just gets bonkers
Because they would actually you know if you're painting a one millimeter wide number on a watch
And I think the watch faces themselves were like three and a half centimeters
you have to have a tiny little point on the end of that paintbrush and
Painters know one way you can achieve this is something called lip pointing which is when you dip the
the brush in the paint in this case radium and then you put it in your mouth and
Just sort of press it down with your lips to make that point finer, and they were doing this with radium
they were literally
ingesting like orally ingesting radium in their mouths, which means orally and
and
Inviting cancer into their bodies unknowingly. Yes
Which is some pretty I mean, that's not good like when you're ingesting the paint itself
Apparently there was a guy who worked for Prudential the insurance company back in 1925
He published a paper his name is Fred Hoffman Frederick Hoffman
And he calculated that the radium girls who painted these watch faces because of that lip pointing technique
They were ingesting something like one and three-quarter grams of this paint every day
It's a lot of money had to lip point so much
It is a lot of money from the viewpoint of the of the the factory owners
You'd think they would have been like no we got to stop that because that is a lot of paint
But that's also a lot of radium that they were taking in too and the big problem with that
Is not just that you know, it's getting inside of you now, and it's burning a hole right through you
It's not really doing that radium is a an alkali earth metal
And it just so happens that calcium is also an alkali earth metal and to your bones
They're they're the same thing your body doesn't differentiate between the two and we our bodies are set up to divert
Calcium basically from the bloodstream right to the bones to help build strong bones, you know
And we do the same thing with radium to our bodies too
So when you ingest radium it enters your bloodstream and it goes right to your bones and it sets about
Screwing you up big time from that point on. Yeah, and apparently some of these young women were saying, you know
They're asking questions early on they were saying like is this bad for you can it hurt you?
And the you know the US radium
Corporation was I mean they started covering up very early what was going on they were doing their own research and
they said and of course the people that were making that radium water did the same thing they would have they would hire out these
Private companies to do this research basically and say everything's fine
And they said, you know ingesting a little bit is just fine a little pool of rose in your cheek and it's great
And I guess they just sort of full stop there
They didn't talk much about how much ingesting a gram every time you did that over time would be like over a period of years
I think in
1916 they put out their own publication
Yeah, from the radium publishing company that said the physiological action of radium sounds not unlike a fairytale
right
Which is weird and they said that the red blood cell count surges
So you you will actually kind of seem a little healthier. I couldn't find that anywhere
From what I saw you it causes hemolysis, which is like the rupturing of red blood cells
but
This is the kind of stuff that like these publications were peddling and doctors in the public were just taking it wholesale
And that was where that idea that radium was good for you came from was from publications from people like the radium publishing company
there was just a lot of
Credulity at the time I guess
Which is weird because this is also like one of the the most
Averacious periods in American history as well. What does that mean?
It means that like people were preying on other people for for profit and money that like that you would do anything for a dollar
You know, okay avarice
Okay, makes sense now. I'm a little I have covered take it easy on me that I will
And I'll let that one slide and I don't know if I've said this or not. I know Jerry wouldn't but we're really glad you're doing good
And it's funny in that factory. They didn't
Say anything about the fact that like oh, you know, can this be dangerous because I've noticed all the men that are working around
radium are wearing these big lead smocks and aprons and
They're handling this stuff with ivory tipped tongs. What's the when we're putting this in our mouth and they're like, don't worry about that
Yeah, and it wasn't so at at u.s. Radium in Orange, New Jersey
It was it's it was part of the corporate culture to basically just treat it really
Cavalier Lee like even the head chemist
Edwin Lehman who would pay dearly for his cavalierness was recorded by an investigator who we'll talk about in a little bit
as
Basically, just handling lumps of radium or like raid like radium powder
Without any kind of gloves no protection no lead apron anything and just kind of just you know scoffing at the idea that that it was it was
You know dangerous
So, you know, some people they're knew that it was dangerous and treated it so but the corporate culture in that company in
Particular was that you know, don't be don't be ridiculous. Who cares stop stop talking stop asking questions kind of thing
Yeah, so this next part I'm gonna issue a trigger warning because it certainly got me with my tooth fears
So if you have dental fears and tooth fears, just be warned
This is from Kate Moore's book and it's about the very first
I think the first young woman to fall ill at the the US RC. Her name was Molly
I don't know if it's magia or magia
And this was in 1922. She was 24 years old
She said she felt like she was about 90
She had this really I mean she ached all over but she had this pain in her lower jaw
specifically and then eventually went to the dentist had these
These abscesses that were just oozing in her mouth and her dentist tried to pull some of her teeth that were rotting and a
part of her jaw literally came out and
It says in in the book he removed it not by an operation
But merely by putting his fingers in the mouth and lifting it out
And I think a few days later
Took out her entire lower jaw the same way just pulled it out of her mouth. Yes. That's horrifying
And if you have what's known as dentophobia, you're probably on the floor right now
It may never go see a dentist again
No, I hope no one listened to that it got me as well man when I was just like this is not this is so wrong
The crazy thing is is Molly magia
She she lived for I
Believe another year or so
With this increasing abscess and like the radium was sitting in her bones in this particular
case in her jaw and her teeth and
Just decaying the tissue around it the bone around it and she just basically rotted from radiation poisoning
From the inside of her jaw out and she suffered from abscesses and eventually died from an abscess
The this abscess apparently your whole the whole left side of her face
The different abscesses grew into one mega abscess and it finally reached her jugular vein and just ate away at her jugular vein
And she could no longer pump
Pump pump blood from her heart. Yeah, see now I sound like I have
The the I mean that is horrific as you can imagine and it gets worse in that
When her doctors were asked what their best guess was of the cause of death, they blamed it on syphilis
Right the company jumps on this and says and this was a big part of the movie
they basically start saying that these girls are
Spreading syphilis around each other and that's what they're sick from. I think in the movie they call it VD, of course
But it was you know one part to sort of shame them into being quiet and to say that in another part to just obviously
You know take the blame as far away from radium as possible
men
Yeah for real
so, you know
I'm not to say in the in the doctor's defense, but they did no one knew what what
Radium poisoning was at the time, right?
So it's not like syphilis wasn't an entirely, you know, just bonkers diagnosis
But there was another thing I saw that that that they considered to that just didn't make sense
But had kind of come and gone before among matchstick makers
Which was something called fossi jaw or phosphorus jaw where you're you're like if you were exposed to white white
Phosphorus which matchmakers were when you're making the head of a match
it
It basically gets
Absorbed into your jaw and rots your jaw so they had kind of seen something like this before but not since like the early
19th century it was much more prevalent in the 18th century and
They didn't think that these these women were working with phosphorus anyway
So it was kind of baffling, but yeah the idea that that you know, even if the doctor did
Naively or innocently, you know say it was syphilis or something like that the company very much jumped on that kind of thing to use
It to paint that
Unflattering picture of the women who would go on to litigate this company and it was
Totally that kind of a company and it was run by those kind of people for sure US dial was
Yeah, so 12
and up to this point 12 of them died think about 50 of them were ill at this point and
They are still full steam ahead. They don't haul production at all
They don't even call for an investigation until 1924 when it leaks out to the press a little bit and they start to get it
You know some sort of bad press about what might be going on
So they commissioned an independent investigation that found out that there was definitely a connection going on and that they're exposure to
Radium is leading to these illnesses and deaths and they buried it and got their own
Not independent commission together. They investigated and came back and said. Oh, no, no, no these young ladies are suffering from a
hysterical condition brought on by coincidence
Yeah, and that was actually not even like a panel's opinion. That was
Arthur rotor the president of US dial. It was his opinion. Yeah, that was his opinion of the whole thing and that that independent investigation
Was a legitimately independent investigation. It was led by dr. Cecil drinker and his wife dr. Catherine drinker who are both Harvard
Harvard public health professors and when they came up with these findings like yeah, this is this these women are all dying
Horrible deaths from radiation poisoning from eating this paint because of this stupid lip-pointing technique
And the company did bury it not only did they bury it?
It's even worse than that they took the drinkers report and
Altered it so that it said that every girl is in perfect condition and then submitted it with the drinkers name on it to the New Jersey
Labor Department and
And like the drinkers had no idea they also told the drinkers if they published their initial report
they would sue them that they've been working confidentially and
Like I was saying like it was just that kind of company. They were just they would engage in dirty tricks
They would do some of the most underhanded stuff you can imagine like they I've got one more anecdote Chuck
This is gonna knock your socks off. They hired a
Industrial toxicologist named Frederick Flynn from Columbia to basically pose as a doctor
to examine one of the the dial painters
And basically tell her that her health was fine
She was in fine shape and they had a VP from us dial sit in and make it seem like he was a
Colleague of this person who she thought was a doctor who emphatically agreed and backed up his position. That's the kind of stuff US dial did
Reprehensible
Agreed Chuck agreed. All right, so we should probably take another break and we'll talk about how everything changed a little bit right after this
Hey, I'm Lance Bass host of the new I hard podcast frosted tips with Lance Bass
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when questions arise or times get tough or you're at the end of the road, okay?
I see what you're doing. Do you ever think to yourself?
What advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation if you do you've come to the right place?
Because I'm here to help this. I promise you. Oh god. Seriously. I swear and you won't have to send an
SOS because I'll be there for you. Oh man, and so my husband Michael
Um, hey, that's me. Yeah, we know that Michael and a different hot sexy teen crush boy bander each week to guide you through life
Step by step not another one kids relationships life in general can get messy
You may be thinking this is the story of my life. Just stop now if so tell everybody
Yeah, everybody about my new podcast and make sure to listen
So we'll never ever have to say bye bye bye
Listen to frosted tips with the Lance Bass on the iHeart radio app apple podcast or wherever you listen to podcasts
All right, so everything changed when a man got sick and that's that's basically the way it went
in 1925 a 36 year old chemist at
at
US RC died of anemia and the Essex County Health Examiner
Guy that'll figure in pretty prominently here going forward. Dr. Harrison Martland got involved and
You know, this is this is what it took. It took a man dying for them to sit up and pay attention
He launched an investigation. He it was it was very sneaky actually. He actually secretly recruited
the technical director
From us RC as a radiation expert and his name was this is one of the best names
We've ever said on the show. Dr. Saban a the Von Sakaki
Mm-hmm, and they took autopsy tissue from
Some of the bone from these young women who had died
Or I'm sorry from the original chemist and they analyzed it and they said yeah, he's he is basically glowing with radiation
Yeah, I have to say also. Dr. Von so Chucky or he was even more than just the technical director
He was the co-founder of US radium and he actually created the radium paint undark that the company used
So the idea of him basically turning
On the company in order to get to the to the bottom of you know, what was going on
I you know, I think that's pretty commendable in that sense. It is
He got he and mark Marth land got a
Geiger counter. I think it was sort of a early crude version basically and they started going around to the houses and in the hospitals
where some of these young women were and
Everything was radioactive
They tested employees at the plant that even weren't sick. They were radioactive. Basically everyone that worked there was radioactive
including
Von so cocky himself. He breathed into the thing and I think he registered the highest radioactive level of
Everybody and died within a few years from from jaw cancer
yeah at age 45 and
From what I saw also if you took a guy a Geiger counter to the gravesite of these people who worked at these factories
Still today the the Geiger counter would measure would set off. It would be set off by the radioactivity coming from
Six six feet of earth separating you and and the remains and that nuts did it will do that for 1,000 years
Wow and
Supposedly the bodies are still glowing underground. I saw that one woman who worked at another one. We'll talk about
Radium dial company. She was exhumed to be examined
For I think a lawsuit later on and they found that she was so radioactive that when they reburied her
They buried her in a lead line coffin. Yeah, I
Mean, this is super radioactive, right? I think we've established that it's just hard to wrap your mind around how
Radioactive these people were and it's crazy that they even live some of them live for you know a few more years like like
Molly magia
She died pretty quickly the woman whose jaw came out
She she died within a couple of years some women lasted four or five six even I think even seven years possibly and
The amount of radiation they were exposed to and the effects that it had on their body made
From the time they got sick to the time they died just basically like a living hell
and the fact that they're still radioactive today really kind of drives home like how
How painful that must have been for them because apparently bone pain is not
It's not like regular pain at all
Like you know if your muscle hurts or joint hurts
You can just kind of like move your arm or something and it starts to feel a little bit better with bone pain
You can't do that. Nothing makes it feel better. It's just like constant pain
And that's what you get when you have radium in your bones
so five of these women got together that we're still living obviously and
And went to court or they didn't go to court right away. It took a long time
It took a long time for them to get enough money together to hire attorneys because there wasn't anyone
initially who would take these cases pro bono
until it took years to raise the money to do this and
One of the woman's name was a grace fryer. She was basically the leader of the factory workers and
She had to wear a back brace because her spine had basically rotted out from the inside
And was crushed
Uh, she had 20 at least 20 surgeries on her jaw
Uh, another woman's name was albina lorice
She had two still bursts and couldn't walk
Another woman was kathryn shalb
She I think her cousin died was another fellow worker there
And so they were like we have to do something here
Um, they were you know, they had all these medical bills. They couldn't even basically pay rent
And finally after a couple years managed to find an attorney who would take it on pro bono
and um
You know, they they did they knew they didn't have long to live at this point
And it's not like they wanted some windfall of money
They just wanted to get by until they died and they wanted to make sure that this didn't happen again
Yeah, and again, this is like new stuff basically where workers are like these were unsafe working conditions
We're going to sue our employer. This is pretty like groundbreaking. So initially the women asked for I think 250,000
a piece
Each for all five of them and their lawyer, um, reyman berry
He apparently was a really good lawyer and really kind of fought the good fight for him
And one of the ways that they were
Ultimately successful because it's kind of an understatement to say that us radium fought this
Uh lossy rather than settling um was that they recruited the the press basically and in particular
The editor of the new york world the guy named walter litman
um
Took up this cause and like you know at the time the new york newspapers were like the most important
media organizations in the world and the new york world was like one of the bigger ones
So it was like, you know, it was having like all of the 24 hour news networks on your side
Drumming up public support for your cause and that really helped them
But even in the end they didn't get anything even remotely close to that quarter of a million. They were asking for
So what the radium corporation did at first was they said
You know in new jersey the law says that we only have to pay you anything if it's within the first two years
Of your exposure and because it took so long for them to raise this money. It was beyond that point
Um, which is just a pretty vile thing to do. Obviously
Um, eventually they settled for $10,000 each
Plus five. I'm sorry $600 a year
For when they were alive, which was only a few years for each of them. I think
Within five years all of them had passed away
Um, it was later exposed that the judge in the case was a stakeholder in us rc
That's what which is really
Pretty dirty obviously
And then I think by 51
30 years later 41 of those original painters had died from different cancers
Yeah, not a single one of the um original five litigants from the the lawsuit
Made it past age 38
And that's like you have by the way a 0.1 percent lifetime risk of developing bone cancer bone cancer is really rare
Like you can get cancer in your bones if you have a different cancer that spreads to your bones
But to start out with bone cancer like many of these women did it's incredibly rare
Um, so the idea of a cluster of them all happening in this one factory and the company having nothing to do with it
Was preposterous. So the fact that they just got to settle for 10,000
per woman was actually kind of a coup. But one of the things that the the
um five uh initial five radium girls were fighting for
was to um
To to create awareness that like this is dangerous
And there's other other women out there in the country and in the world who are doing the same thing
Eating radium pain every day and we want this to stop and it actually did have that effect that knock-on effect
And not one but chuck as you told me before to my establishment two other cases
um where
Companies were basically forced to to um to settle and eventually radium paint was driven out of use
Yeah, the other one or one of the other two was the radium dial factory that we mentioned earlier in auto illinois
and
You know, I don't know if you can rank like
Which ones were were more gross and dirty and awful, but radium dial
They actually did know what was going on the whole time for years. They had been
Uh testing their employees. They had doctors coming in and they were giving them annual physicals
And they were recording radiation levels and they just never told them basically
Uh, I think before they went and filed that lawsuit
They were just suppressing information bearing everything they could they did they even did autopsies and then tampered with those autopsies
I think that's what you were mentioning earlier. Was that the other company did that too?
Mm-hmm, and they also lucked out by having an amazing lawyer too. They were led by two women katharine wolf donahue
and charlotte nevin's persel kind of took the lead for the the lawsuit against um
radium dial and this is
You know years after this had made like the national press the the um us radium
Lawsuit like it was a everybody was talking about it and for years some companies managed to avoid any kind of culpability
And finally donahue and um and persel
Um with the help of their lawyer lennard grossman filed lawsuit against radium dial
um
They tried some underhanded stuff themselves in addition to the whole autopsy thing
But once they were found out they they decided to shut down and then reopen in new york as a different company
And they said oh, yeah that other company was terrible, but it doesn't exist anymore
We're a new company now. So forget that lawsuit and uh, they were they were ruled against and were held
accountable still
Yeah, and uh, obviously like you mentioned because of all of this
it was a
Very big deal for this country as far as work workers rights safety in the workplace
um, it kind of directly led it took a long time, but it kind of directly led to the
um to the forming of osha
Uh, which was a big deal. I think it directly led in 1938
to the uh, the food drug and cosmetic act
Um, and of course this was for the public at large
So we weren't ingesting stuff like that in our cosmetics, but it also protected workers who were putting that stuff in the cosmetics
Mm-hmm years years after the public was protected for sure
But yeah, it definitely had like a real a real impact and a real effect on on the world
Um, one of the things I saw though about radium dial corporation's headquarters
It was finally demolished in 1968 in Ottawa, Illinois
and the
The town used the the like rubble as backfill and landfill around the town
So now there's 16
radioactive superfund sites around poor little Ottawa, Illinois
Um, that the epa is dealing with cleaning up and is causing all sorts of problems for the um for the residents of the town
So it was like this one big problem and then they spread it out all over town when they they used the rubble
Yeah, not super fun
Super fun. There's a there's a really important d on the end of that
Got to really over pronounce that d
Agreed
You got anything else about the radium girls?
I don't I mean the movies on netflix you can check it out. It's uh, it's a little late to endorse it now
Well, I mean, it's not terrible. I think on rotten tomatoes. It had like a 70 something
But it it just uh critically wasn't well reviewed and um, also not by me
I see I got you. Um, well since chuck said also not by me, of course everyone that means it's time for listener mail
Uh, I'm going to call this a nashvillians response to the grand old opry joe
Uh, hey guys, just want to give you a shout out about how much this native nashvillian
Enjoyed your episode about the grand old opry. I grew up hearing about the rhyman's perfect acoustics
In stories of country stars drinking at tootsie's bar behind the opry until it was time to go on stage
And running through the aligning back doors. My first job was actually at opry land theme park. Oh, wow
I wonder if we met uh, it was at the water ride in the flume zoom
I think I do remember you camille
Uh, immediately across us was the porter wagner stage and mr. Wagner himself performed every friday
I now live in chicago and honestly, it's a little hard to visit nashville since it's become a destination hot spot
For bachelor and bachelorette parties. I didn't know that
Did you know that?
It didn't either. No, it makes sense though. I mean, I know that's where you had your bachelor party
I'll never forget that night. Sure, nashville is crazy
Uh, plus skyrocketing rents and new developments have pushed out a lot of locals and mom and pop businesses
Future episode recommendation
Reprocussions of being an it city
Uh, but listening to your episode reminded me the quirky little city I grew up in plus. I learned some cool facts about the opry
I didn't know a long time fan that is camille
A long time fan that is camille mccarthy
That is high praise coming from a
OG nashvillian, you know
Yeah, and camille also responded when I told her it was going to be a listener mail
With a big woohoo. You guys are awesome. I just snucked out your venus episode while grocery shopping
fantastic
Well, thanks a lot camille appreciate that. I hope you got some good groceries
Uh, hope you wore a mask while you went grocery shopping, and I hope you're vaccinated
Nice full circle there. Yeah, uh, if you want to get in touch with me chuck jerry chucks
covid
Whatever you can write us all an email to stuff podcast at iheartradio.com
Stuff you should know is a production of iheart radio for more podcasts my heart radio visit the iheart radio app
Apple podcasts or wherever you listen to your favorite shows
Hey, i'm lance bass host of the new iheart podcast frosted tips with lance bass
Do you ever think to yourself?
What advice would lance bass and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do you've come to the right place because i'm here to help and a different hot sexy teen crush boybander
Each week to guide you through life tell everybody you everybody
About my new podcast and make sure to listen so we'll never ever have to say bye. Bye. Bye. Bye
Listen to frosted tips with lance bass on the iheart radio app apple podcast or wherever you listen to podcasts
Introduce the biz tape you're all things music business and media podcast join me joe wasleski and my co-host
Collin mckay every wednesday where we discuss the breaking news changing the music industry
And what your favorite artists and creatives are up to listen to new episodes of the biz tape
Every wednesday on the national podcast network available on iheart radio app apple podcasts or wherever you listen to podcasts