Cautionary Tales with Tim Harford - How the Radium Girls Fought Back
Episode Date: December 8, 2023Cautionary Book Club: Mollie Maggia's dentist planned to remove a painful abscess from her mouth. But to his horror, her jawbone disintegrated at his touch, crumbling and splintering until it re...sembled ash. Like hundreds of her colleagues, Mollie had been slowly poisoned by her work with glowing radium dust. Eight months after her first toothache, she was dead. In the previous episode, Cautionary Tales told the story of the "Radium Girls". Their employers ignored the horrific side effects of these women's work, resorting to obfuscation and even outright lies to deny their claims that they were getting sick. In this follow-up interview, Tim Harford sits down with Kate Moore, author of The Radium Girls: The Dark Story of America's Shining Women. Tim and Kate discuss how the women banded together and worked out what was happening to them, as well as how they fought back against their powerful bosses and their monumental legacy.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Pushkin
This is a follow-up to our previous episode about two disturbing yet quite different cases of mass radiation poisoning.
If you haven't listened to that episode yet, I suggest you do.
listened to that episode yet, I suggest you do. Last time we heard about the Goyania incident, how a highly radioactive substance was left
unattended, discovered by grey market scrap dealers, and wreaked havoc on a neighborhood of
people who had no idea what they were dealing with, and no reason that they should know.
It was a story about critical thinking, about the brilliant heroic detective work of a woman
who figured out the source of the suffering, but Alas didn't survive her encounter with
it.
In the end, everyone pulled together to try to diagnose and solve the problem.
But we also heard about a different case, one in which the risks of radiation poison
were known, or at least widely suspected,
and people weren't pulling together at all. Instead, powerful businessmen resorted to
obfuscation, misdirection, and outright lies leading to the painful deaths of their employees,
and there's much, much more to say about that. I'm Tim Haferd, and you're listening to a special
book club edition of Corsion Retails. At Second Story, the story of the Radium Girls, is our subject today.
I am delighted to have the opportunity to speak with Kate Moore, the author of numerous
books across a range of genres in particular The New York Times Best Seller, The Radium
Girls, which is a powerful heart-breaking account
of their experiences and their fight for justice.
Kate Moore, welcome to Corsion Retails.
Thank you so much, Tim.
Well, I'm delighted that you could join us.
How did you first come across this story?
What inspired you to write the book?
So I first discovered the story of the Radium Girls
through directing a play about them
and it really has been just the most incredible serendipitous journey. I found the play
through googling great plays for women and the moment I found the script which was The Shining
Lives by Melanie Marnich, I fell in love with these characters. This story of women fighting
for justice, this story of heartbreak and tragedy, and yet strength and dignity and courage
was just so universal in its power and it just connected with me straight away. And I knew
it was based on a true story. So as I prepared for my theatre production, I did
as much research as I could on the radium girls. I was really interested in their personal
stories, what were their weddings like, how many siblings did the girls have, what was
personally important to them as they went through this experience. And I could not find
the answers to my questions. I was absolutely stunned that this incredible story that had left such a lasting legacy
did not have a book that celebrated the individual women.
And ultimately I thought, well, if no one else has written that book, why don't I?
So tell us about these. We've described them both as girls and as women.
Yeah.
They're employees in two factories working with radium because it makes numbers on watches glow,
so it's useful.
Were they girls, were they women, how old were they?
They were girls at the beginning of the story because it was mostly teenage girls who were
employed in these dial painting factories.
Most of them were sort of 13, 14, 15, 16 years of age, but actually the record show that
some of them were as young as 11.
It was seen as such a great job for the poor working girls as the sources have it.
They're actually the women who were lucky enough to have jobs promoted it to
their friends and sisters and cousins and you'd have high schoolers coming and
working in the summer holidays. People really wanted to be a radium girl. It was
a glamorous job, it was a lucrative job, it was an artistic job. One of my
favorite moments in my research for the book was
looking up Catherine Wolf-Dunahue in her local town directory, and it listed her name and her
address and her profession. And it didn't say, Dial Painter, it said, Artist Radium Dial Company.
Wow. Some of the earliest studios opened sort of 1916, 1917,
just before the First World War really begins
and it was the First World War that really led to a boom
in the radium dial painting industry
because the women didn't just paint watches and clocks
with this glow in the dark, radium paint.
They would be painting the instruments
that would light up dashboards of automobiles
or the airplanes, things that were really useful in the war effort.
These women, in some cases, these girls, they're ingesting the radio,
it's dusting their clothes, it's on the paintbrushes, they're licking the paintbrushes
to get them to a fine point, and their bodies are just absorbing more and more of this stuff,
which few people at the time realise is so dangerous.
Exactly, and actually it's even worse than not realising it's dangerous.
At the time we're talking about 1910s, 1920s, there was actually a belief that a small amount
of radium was beneficial to health.
So if you went into your local pharmacy, you could buy radium pills, radium was beneficial to health. So if you went into your local pharmacy,
you could buy radium pills, radium dressings,
radium cosmetics to give you a brighter complexion,
radium milk, radium toothpaste.
There was a whole range of products.
People actually drank radium water as a health tonic,
and the recommended dose was five to 7 glasses a day.
Well, it becomes slowly apparent that maybe in fact, radium is not a health tonic.
What are the symptoms at first of radium poisoning?
Well, Moni Magia was one of the first to begin her suffering.
She worked with her sisters in the orange plant in New Jersey,
and Molly's first symptom was simply an aching tooth.
And this is what so insidious about the type of radiation
poisoning suffered by the radium girls.
It started so innocently, Grace
Friall, she had a saw back, Catherine Dunningew in Illinois, she's got a
painful ankle, you know, affecting the women in different ways and in ways
that you wouldn't immediately think, oh, I've got a fatal poisoning.
Different symptoms and they all seem so mild at first. Exactly, and Molly obviously
goes to the dentist because she has this painful tooth and he extracts it, but then Molly finds that the next tooth starts to hurt
and then the next tooth and then the next until her dentist doesn't have to pull her teeth
anymore because they simply fall out on their own. How long does this take? In Molly's case, it's very rapid.
She's one of the first radium girls to be suffering in this way.
And the dentists don't realise that actually pulling the teeth
and trying to deal with it actually accelerates her condition.
So she started getting a sore tooth in the October of 1921.
By the May of 1922, she has gone to her dentist to complain again about the pains
in her jaw and the dentist reaches into her mouth to prod at her jawbone and he finds that it
literally splinters to his touch and he's able to remove Molly's jaw, not by an operation, but simply by lifting it out.
The point at which your jaw is literally falling apart, of course, at that moment,
you realise that something terrible is wrong. But how do the women in New Jersey start to figure
out they had some kind of suffering in common. Radiant poisoning may take several years to show itself even in those mild symptoms that
we first talked about. The women may not have been dial pained as any more but of course
they still were in contact with the sisters and cousins and friends they had worked with.
And so it was literally the women sharing their stories, being open about the pain that
they were suffering and realising as Catherine
Scharb put it, one of the New Jersey girls, there is something going on with this
thing. The women realised before any of the experts did because it took a long
time before people actually took any attention of the fact that dozens of
young women were dying in New Jersey. And once the women themselves had figured out that something was going on, what then?
These poor working class women had no way of proving what had happened to them and without
that proof, they couldn't really do anything.
For me, one of the shocking things about the story is they didn't get that expert help
until the first male employee of the radium firm died.
When Dr. Lehman passed away in June 1925, which actually is three years after Molly Magia
dies in September 1922, Amanda is a brilliant doctor called Harrison Martland steps up,
all topsies him, none of the other women have been all topseed.
And it's through Martland that the women finally get the expert proof they need to be able to take on the company.
But even then, it's not straightforward, partly because the law is set against them.
There's a statute of limitations which says you have to file suit within two years.
It takes sometimes up to five years or longer
for Rayleigh and Poisoning to show itself.
And the second major block to these women's fight for justice
was that the Rayleigh and Thurms themselves denied responsibility
and not only that, they were active in trying to cover up
this scandal and this tragedy, and for them to admit that radium was dangerous,
even in small amounts, would mean the end of their lucrative industries.
And so, they tried everything in their power to silence the truth coming out,
and to silence the radium girls as well.
They did engage in all kinds of denial and obfuscation.
Tell us a little bit about the tactics they were using.
When the rumours that the women were being killed by their work surfaced,
one of the first things they did was they commissioned an independent report to look into it.
The problem came when the report came back that the radium was the culprit. And at that point, they profess to not be able to believe what the expert has said.
This is an expert called Dr. Sassal Drinker, who worked with his wife,
Catherine Drinker, on this groundbreaking report that said a small amount of radium
was to blame for the radium girls, illnesses and deaths.
So they hush up this report, but they don't only
do that. They decide to commission another expert called Dr. Frederick Flynn to write another
report, and he finds that it's not the radium. And this is the report that gets published.
The other one, the company refuses to allow the drinkers to publish. And so it's the other
report that comes out. And this Dr. Dr. Flynn is also hired to try to allow the drinkers to publish. And so it's the other report that comes out.
And this Dr. Flynn is also hired to try to examine the radium girls
to tell them that they're in perfect health
despite their limps, despite their aching teeth,
despite the fact that some of their legs are beginning to shorten
as the radium inside them is destroying their bones.
Despite all of those things, the doctors are saying,
no, you're in perfect health, there is no reason for you to file suit against the company. There is no reason for
you to feel worried. And of course, these women don't know how to respond to be told by an
expert that you're in perfect health, even if your body is telling you that it's not, you
know, the lawyers are reading Frederick Flynn's report, so they don't want to take on the case either,
because to their minds there is no proven link
that says the radium is hurting the women.
But it wasn't only the lawyers who didn't want to help the women.
After the break, we'll find out how they were treated by their community.
And one of the things that really shocked me reading your book was not just that the company hired an expert to write this report and it was a white wash. Okay, that's bad.
But their own community doctors wouldn't believe them
and wrote off their experiences.
And that seems to partly be because
the Great Depression is approaching
as we move into the 1930s,
they were worried that if the women were believed,
then that would be the end of the factory.
And if it's the end of the factory,
then a lot of people are gonna lose their jobs.
That's gonna be bad for the community. And so there seems to be this response from the
community at large, for example, from the community doctors, to harsh all this up.
Absolutely, and it's hard enough that they're suffering this, it's
cruciating pain. It's hard enough that they're facing financial hardship because of course they're
having to pay out so much money for operations, for medicines, but on top of all of that, you've got your friends and your neighbours
shining you, criticising you, calling you liars and fakes and fraud.
People thought the women were trying to take the companies for a ride.
They thought the women had just got sick and they were trying to claim money
under false pretenses.
And so the women were really shamed for that. And there was no support.
So for me, it makes their courage and their resilience and their persistence in pursuing this case.
And as you say, it's the 1930s now. This is decades the women have been fighting.
It makes their determination to hold the companies to account even more impressive.
Do you think that if all the people working in the
radium dial factories had been men, this would be a different story?
I think it would, personally.
When women say they're in pain, when women say I think it's this,
often they are dismissed, they're called hysteric,
which happened to a lot of the radium girls,
and people disbelieve them.
I also think there is a tendency that women can be seen
as expendable, I think that definitely happened
in the case of the radium girls.
So what I do think it would be a different story
if it had been men who had been harmed.
And I think for me, one of the most shocking things
about the story is that these radium firms
not only have the dial painting studios,
where the women are being taught to lip point
and put the brushes between their lips,
they're not informed of any danger.
So the women think it's fine to be covered
in the glowing dust and go out dancing after work.
They think it's fine to paint a silly moustache
on their face with the glowing paint.
Next door to those dial painting studios where all of that is happening, you have the laboratories.
Where admittedly the men are handling large amounts of radium, but they are protected.
They are issued with lead aprons. They are told to take enforced vacations, so they're not overexposed to the radiation.
They handle the radium with ivory tipped tongs, and they are warned about the danger.
And there's also a tendency to lie to the women about the severity of their own condition,
even from people who have the women's best interests at heart.
There's one, as really a very moving moment
towards the end of your book where one of the heroines
of the story, Catherine Wolf-Donahue,
she doesn't know she's dying.
And she discovers that in really the most painful
and public way possible.
I wrote that scene that you're talking about with tears streaming down my face.
And that scene takes place in the courtroom in Off the Were Illinois.
Catherine Dunning here is now very, very sick.
She's got a great fruit-sized tumour on her hip.
She has lost most of her teeth.
Her mouth is constantly seeping past,
so she's having to dab her mouth with a patented anchor chief,
and she's been carried to the courtroom
because she cannot walk anymore,
and her bones are so fragile from the radium
that she can almost barely be carried.
It's a large undertaking in order even to get her there.
But Catherine is determined to have her day in court.
And so she's sitting in this room in the courthouse.
And one of her doctors is on the stand and is being grilled
about her prognosis.
And he is asked directly what are her chances,
you know, how long does she have left?
What is the situation here?
And he hesitates before answering because he knows that Catherine doesn't know and she
is sitting right there in the courtroom and he glances over at her and in that glance
and in that hesitation tells Catherine all she needs to know
that she is not going to make it.
She knows she is not going to be there for her children,
her two young children, they are going to grow up without a mother.
And she lets out this shriek, this scream,
and collapses to the floor, and her husband rushes to her and her
friend Pearl rushes to her, and they carry her out, and the doctors warn that if Katherine
continues with the case, if she continues to give evidence, it's very likely to end in
her death.
They say that the risk is too great.
But when Catherine recovers, she insists, she says,
even if I cannot get to the courtroom,
the court can come to me.
And the following day, the court comes to her house
at 520 E. Superior Street, and they crowd into her front room
and Catherine is laid out on the sofa with a blanket over her. And even though her voice is almost gone, even though she is in
incredible pain and incredible emotional pain at having just been told that she is going
to die from this, she uses the last vestiges of energy that she has to give her evidence
and she does it for herself and she does it for her give her evidence, and she does it for herself,
and she does it for her friends and her family,
and she does it for all the other workers out there
who may be hurt if she doesn't continue with this fight.
There's an incredibly moving scene.
You kind of love and hate her lawyer at that moment because you realize he's
engineered this, he knows this is going to happen and it's all good for the
cause but it's it's just excruciating for her. The other thing that I could not
believe as I was reading was that the company then kept on appealing, because they realized if they
were able to hold it up long enough, she'd just die and then they didn't have to pay anything,
because she'd be dead.
Catherine dies in the end, the day after, you know, one of those appeals has been filed,
so she wins her case, but they appeal it. And when she learns of that, the strength just
went, and she passed away at home.
So at first these women were being rejected by their employers, they were being rejected,
and to some extent by their own community, nobody seemed to believe them. But then they did have
some champions, they did have people who came to fight alongside them. I really admire the fact that it's other women who championed them.
Given we're talking about a time, as you say, a hundred years ago, 1910s, 1920s, 1930s,
it was still rare to have women in public roles.
So one of those champions was a person called Catherine Wiley.
She was the executive secretary of the Cons league which fought for better working conditions for
women. And she finds out about the story when a health officer who's been
dealing with the case, she said people were just hushing it up and brushing it
under the carpet. You need to keep after them to ensure that something will be done. And Catherine
Wiley was the best person that could have been reached out to. And she immediately interviewed
the radium girls who were suffering at that time. And she met a woman called Margarit Carlo
who was actually the first radium girl to file suit. At that point, Marguerite was very near death. She was suffering extremely.
And Catherine Wiley said, having met Marguerite, I cannot rest until I have done something to ensure that this never happens again.
She was the kind of woman that just kept knocking on the doors, kept getting the meetings,
kept niggling at the company president to say you've got to release the drink report,
what's happening with it? And she was just tenacious in ensuring that ultimately the truth came out.
And this was partly campaigning for changes in the law because one of the astonishing things is
what the radium dial company and the other radium companies were doing was not actually illegal.
There was no protection for workers from poisoning. And if it's a slow burning condition, if it takes more than
two years to become apparent, that doesn't count either. There's a statute of limitations. So
this isn't just all the company needs to behave better. It was also a case that the whole system
needed to change. Absolutely. And Catherine Wiley very quickly got the law changed so that something called radium necrosis became a compensable disease under New Jersey law. But radium necrosis only referred to the
jaws disintegrating. It didn't impact on the cancers that the women later received. It wasn't
to do with the anemia that killed many of them. It wasn't to do with the fracturing bones that
they were suffering. And so Catherine
Wiley had a sheep at a pretty easy time getting that first law through. And it was because no one really
could claim on it. You had to be really smart in how you were drafting these laws so that actually
people could be held accountable, but she realised her mistake, and then she fought again to get
radium poisoning, which would cover everything on the statue books. But telling Lee that fight
took her much longer. It wasn't until the 1930s that she succeeded in getting that law changed.
And I want to talk briefly about Alice Hamilton. I know she's not a central figure in this story,
but she is a she is a fixture in cautionary tale. She's a bit of a legend.
Is she?
Well, she was the country's leading expert on lead poisoning and she told Thomas Midgley,
who was the inventor of CFCs and of adding lead to gasoline. She told him not to do it and
she tried to get him to stop and try to get that regulated. But she also has this role in the radium story as well, doesn't she?
That's right. Not only did the radium firms cover up the drink report,
but they actually told the Department of Labor
who had started investigating all these deaths.
They said the drink report had proved that actually it wasn't radium,
so they totally lied about the results.
And because they were refusing
to let drink a publish, there was no way to refute that. And Alice Hamilton was central in
essentially ferritting out that truth that the company had lied. Drinker obviously was absolutely
furious when he found out that the company had done that. Catherine Drinker called Arthur Reader,
the company president, a real villain for having done that.
So Alice Hamilton was involved in that way
and helping Raymond Berry, the new Jersey lawyer,
with the cases as well, assisting him
in whatever way she could to ensure that the medical
and technical information that he needed was there
so that he could really do his best work
in representing the women in court. We'll find out about lawyer Raymond Berry and the man who
represented the women involved in a horrifyingly similar case in Ottawa after the break.
We're back and I'm talking to Kate Moore, author of Radium Girls. So tell me about the two lawyers who are central to these two cases.
Raymond Berry and London Grossman, they're quite striking characters.
Very much so, it was a pleasure to write them in the book.
A smile comes to my face as I'm thinking about them. Very different characters, I have to say.
Rayman Barry was the first lawyer to tackle the radium cases
because he was working in New Jersey.
The New Jersey women were working during the First World War.
The Ottawa studio didn't open until 1922.
So everything that's happening in New Jersey
is happening about five years ahead
of what's happening in Ottawa.
And it's one of those really frustrating things about looking back at these stories from
history and thinking, if it had to happen that the radium girls have to get hurt before
we realise that a small amount of radium was dangerous, it should only have happened
to one group of women.
And actually, because of the lies, because of the lack of
communication and publication and promotion in those days, it took much longer for the truth to
out and it led to the suffering of many, many more women. In New Jersey, when the court cases are
coming up, the women tried desperately to find a lawyer, everyone is saying no, until Raymond Barry.
desperately to find a lawyer, everyone is saying no, until Raymond Barry.
He was a very young lawyer,
not even in his 30s yet.
He had baby phase good looks, blue eyes, blonde hair,
a very, very smart man,
and his brilliance was in tackling the statute
of limitations question,
which was why the women kept getting knocked back
by many other attorneys.
They just couldn't figure out because the law said you have to file suit within two years.
This is now sort of 1925 that we're talking. Seven years, eight years, since the women have been hurt at their workplace.
No one else can figure it out, but Raymond Berry does.
So what's the trick?
So, there were kind of two tricks to it, really.
berry does. So what's the trick? So there were the kind of two tricks to it really. The women could not file suit until they had that proof, the medical scientific proof, that it was the radium
that had hurt them. One trick is that because the radium firm had covered up the drinker report,
they shouldn't be allowed to rely on the delay caused by their cover-up. Well, morally,
absolutely.
I'm just surprised that that legally that work
has been as apparently it does.
Okay.
Completely.
And then the other twist that he put on it,
which I think is really smart,
is that you're supposed to file suit
within two years of the point of injury.
What has happened to Catherine and to Grace
and all the other women is that they've ingested
the radium through lip pointing.
And radium is what's
called a bone seeker. So it's a bit like calcium in that way. We know when we drink a glass
of milk, calcium in the milk goes into our bones, makes them nice and strong. When the radium
goes ingested the radium, it also settles in their bones. But there, once it has settled, it's emanating, it's immense radioactivity, and this is why
the jaw bones are splintering, the women's legs are spontaneously fracturing and shortening,
because the radium is inside their body, and it is hurting them constantly, because it's
constantly emanating radioactivity.
And the legal argument, therefore, is the women
are still being injured, because the radio is inside them,
it is hurting them and you, with every second.
And so they can file suit, because the point of injury
is still occurring.
Clever. Clever.
Very.
Tell us about that at Grossman, the lawyer
who was paid in shoes, I understand.
Exactly. Leonard Grossman, senior senior was again a very special man.
He was dynamic.
You know, a real showman in the courtroom.
He really knew what he was doing in that regard.
He fought for the underdog, as you say, if people couldn't pay him, he sometimes accepted
payment in shoes.
You know, if that was all they had going, he would fight for them. And the case of the radium girls, he sometimes accepted payment in shoes. You know, if that was all they had going,
he would fight for them. And the case of the radium girls, he did it pro bono, and it was
hours and hours and hours of his time. And he kept fighting, even after Catherine, then
he who died, he kept fighting for years because it was the right thing to do. He was a man
who always did the right thing to do. He was a man who always did the right thing.
But he did the right thing in the most flamboyant ways.
He did.
Yeah, he was the kind of man that wore sort of, you know,
spat shoes and he was a large than life character,
a large man in himself and he just had that energy
and that presence.
And he deployed that brutally sometimes.
We've alluded to the moment where
Katherine WiltoniHue discovers in court that she is going to die.
Leonard Grossman knew that that would happen.
Presumably that whole exchange
was something he'd rehearsed in his mind, I imagine,
because he knew it would be a winning moment.
Yeah, and I'm sure Leonard Grossman was aware of the optics,
shall we say, of Catherine lying on her sofa close
to death and everyone crowded round her dining table, taking the evidence.
He had the media there crowded into that front room, taking pictures of Catherine lying
on the sofa of her friend Charlotte Pistyle with her dress pinned up because her arm
has been amputated because of the radium poisoning. All the women they're sitting in a row showing physically, viscerally, what they have suffered. And Lena
Grossman, I'm sure, was aware of the power of those images in reaching the public, in reaching
the judge, hoping to achieve the verdict that he was going for. Yeah, Grossman was very clever there.
Very much so.
I was really struck by the bravery and the tenacity
of the women, but also of their solidarity
and their sense of a wider purpose.
They weren't just doing this for themselves.
They were very conscious of their families,
husbands, children, and the wider community
that what had happened to them
couldn't be allowed to happen again. That's absolutely right. I think it's children and the wider community that what had happened to them couldn't be allowed to happen again.
That's absolutely right.
I think it's one of the amazing things
about their story, actually,
the altruism with which they fought for justice
because there wasn't any hope for the radium girls
who had got sick and yet they fought on.
And in fact, one of my favorite quotations
in the book comes from Grace Freyer,
one of the New Jersey girls who was instrumental
in making sure that the court case happened. She was single-minded in ensuring that they would
get an attorney, you know, she tried lawyer after lawyer after lawyer. Grace was incredibly smart.
She ended up working for a bank after she had been in the dial painting studios and she used every
bit of her brains, channeled on this case to make it happen. She was the daughter of a
union delegate and I think that passion for politics and that understanding of workers
rights and that this was wrong really drove grace. When she was asked about filing suit while she was doing it. She said,
it is not for myself that I care. I'm thinking more of the hundreds of other girls to whom this
may serve as an example. For me, that really sums up the power of what they did and what they achieved.
So what did they achieve? Did they get compensation for themselves within their own lives?
What's the legacy of this case? Within their own lifetimes, some of them achieved a small
measure of justice, shall we say. Partly that was court case judgment that went for them.
Partly it was compensation to help them with their medical bills, but the money was really
never enough, and by the end
it wasn't about the money, it was about the moral victory, and it was about the scientific proof.
The legacy, therefore, goes beyond what they achieved in their own lives.
And it impacts many different areas of society and our world. On a legal front they changed workers' compensation laws. They made it so
that it was illegal to poison your employees. So there were lots of gains that they made in that
regard and theirs was one of the first cases in which an employer was held responsible for the
health of their employees. They have an incredible legacy in terms of the science of this story. No one had
ever been poisoned in this way before, and actually the radium girls were studied for decades,
because scientists appreciated that their bodies held unique knowledge for the world
about what radiation does to the human body. There were departments set up that studied them.
The women came voluntarily to submit to medical tests,
blood tests, sex raise, bone marrow investigations and so on.
They had everything done and they came altruistically
to give that knowledge to the world
because they hoped it would help.
They hoped no one else would suffer as they did.
Radium girls were exhumed from the graves in these studies,
so that women that had died in the past, their bodies gave up the secrets,
so that the world and scientists could learn from them about what radiation does.
And in fact, they are still using the Radium girls bodies to learn now.
I've actually been contacted by scientists from NASA, and they're using the data on the radium girls
to try to determine what might happen to astronauts' bodies,
for example, on the journey to Mars,
what might space radiation do to them,
how might it affect them?
And so the radium girls are still having a legacy,
and they're still helping us today learn more about radiation.
And I'd say there's also a final element to their
legacy which is specifically workplace safety in nuclear industries. Thanks to
the radium girls they did discover that even a small amount of radiation is
harmful and it happened just in time for
the Second World War and the race to build the atomic bomb.
And the scientist who was in charge of the Manhattan Project literally wrote in his diary
that as he was walking through the lab, he sort of had a vision of the ghost girls.
As the radium girls were known, he remembered what had happened to them.
He only knew what had happened to them
because of the women's tenacity
in making their court cases from page news.
And he said, I don't want anyone on the Manhattan Project
to suffer as they did.
So he insisted that they conduct experiments
to find out about the biomedical properties
of the uranium and the plutonium they were using.
They were found to be biomedically
very similar to radium and therefore the workers on the Manhattan Project were protected
and therefore everyone today working in nuclear industries is protected because of the radium
girls. There's a more disheartening legacy as well. I mean the first deaths were in the 1920s, the court cases were often
in the 1930s, Catherine Wolfdonahue died in the 1930s, but as late as the 1970s, you describe people
in those communities denying the experiences of these women. Tell me about that.
Because scientists were studying the women for decades, they would go and interview people in Ottawa, Illinois,
and the interviews they conducted,
even in the 1970s, had those community members saying,
so and so was never very healthy to begin with.
I don't think it was radium poisoning.
You know, she always had one foot in the grave.
They were denying it even in the 1970s.
And I think one of the lessons of the radium girl's story
is that history can
repeat itself if we're not vigilant. And we know that similar stories are happening
even today. And so it's about being aware of that. And it's about tackling injustices
and lies when we see them. And knowing that it may take years, but if you're
patient and you persevere, the truth will out.
We always promise our listeners a lesson in every cautionary tale on it. I think you've
just given us the lesson to think about. Is there anything else you'd like to add? I think the only thing I'd like to add is about the girls themselves, which was always my
mission and my motive in writing the radium girls. It was about celebrating the women,
Grace Freyer, Catherine Wolf, Danny Hugh, Molly Magia, these incredible women. And for
me actually, I think the biggest lesson of all
that we can learn from the radium girls is that no matter how small you may feel or how powerless,
you can make a difference. Because that's what these women did. As a sisterhood, they banded together,
they fought for what they believed in and they stood up for themselves.
And they made every second count.
Kate Moore, thank you so much for talking to cautionary tales.
Thank you so much for inviting me.
I've been speaking with Kate Moore. She is the New York Times best-selling author of
The Radium Girls, which of course is available wherever you get good books. She has written
many other books and most recently, the critically acclaimed, the woman they could not silence.
Corsary Tales is written by me, Tim Haafed, with Andrew Wright.
It's produced by Alice Finds, with support from Marilyn Rust.
The sound design and original music is the work of Pascal Warris.
Sarah Nix edited the scripts.
It features the voice talents of Ben Crow, Mel Negutridge, Stella Haafed, Gemma Saunders
and Rufus Wright.
The show also wouldn't have been possible without the work of Jacob Weisberg, Ryan Dilly,
Greta Cohn, Dital Malade, John Schnarrs, Eric Sandler, Carrie Brody and Christina Sullivan.
Corsary Tales is a production of Pushkin Industries.
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