RADIUM GIRLS
Another topic under discussion at
the 8 am Wescoats Corner & Five Points Arby's coffee
group, Saturday morning the 23 of
March, 2019, is ' The Radium Girls ' , known in
the 1920's, and needing instant
research.
The radium girls were female factory
workers who contracted radiation while painting
watch dials with luminous paint
in Orange, New Jersey, Ottawa, Illinois and
Waterbury, Connecticut.
The women workers had been instructed
to ' point ' their brush with their lips to get a fine
point and were told the paint was
harmless. The ' paint' was made from powdered radium,
gum arabic and water. The New
Jersey women sued in 1928 and the case was settled ' out
of court' and the Illinois women
won a suit in 1938.
The luminous paint material is
extracted and purified from Carnotite ore mined at Paradox
Valley, Colorado and other mines in
Utah. Near 4000 women were painting watch faces with
radium for payment of one penny and
a half to lip, dip and paint for each of 250 dials
a day. Most of these workers later
suffered anemia, fractures, necrosis, but the ailment was ignored.
Litigation was difficult, no lawyer
wanted to take on the big radium company and the courts were slow to
review the cases which when heard were appealed, appealed and
appealed.
In 1939 the U. S. Supreme Court
refused ti here the case.
The five workers who were known as '
The Radium Girls ' were Grace Fryer, Edna Hussman, Katherine
Schaub and two sisters Quinta McDonald and Albina Larice.
Abstract: WIKIPEDIA
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