
Today we are revisiting a tragic case of negligence which originally captivated us back in 2024. When Marie and Pierre Curie discovered radium in 1898, the chemical element was quickly adopted by manufacturers for its luminescent properties that would go on to be used in, among other things, the painting of clock faces, watches, and instrument panels, allowing them to be seen in the dark. At the time, the introduction of radioluminescent materials into manufacturing was hailed as a scientific solution to an age-old frustration, but it didn’t take long before that solution was shown to have terrible consequences.
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Alayna
The price of gas right now is crazy. Know what's not crazy?
Ash
The price of Paramount plus stream new
Alayna
series like Dutton Ranch, returning favorites like the agency, and live sports like UFC. Paramount plus 99 cents per month for
Ash
the first two months.
Alayna
Stream now.
Ash
Chilling crime cases are mysterious, but finding coverage shouldn't be. With the State Farm personal price plan, you have options and can personalize your plan to help create an affordable price so so you can get back to cracking all of life's bigger cases. Talk to a State Farm agent today to learn how you can choose to bundle and save with the personal price plan. Like a good neighbor, State Farm is there. Head to statefarm.com to get a quote. Prices are based on rating plans that vary by state. Coverage options are selected by the customer. Availability, amount of discounts and savings and eligibility vary by state. Allergy season does not slow down when you are on the move. That's why Kleenex Ultra soft tissues are ready whenever sneezes strike. Kleenex ultra soft tissues are allergist approved and silky soft for up to 100% irritation free skin. And now with new Kleenex Snap and Go, you get that same gentle care made for life on the go. Get the Kleenex ultra soft tissues you love in a new compact durable package. New Kleenex Snap and Go snaps shut for a clean tissue anytime, anywhere. For whatever happens next. Grab Kleenex Snap and Go. Hey, weirdos. I'm Ash.
Alayna
And I'm Alayna.
Ash
And this is Morbin.
Alayna
This is morbid.
Ash
I don't even know why I sang it. It just started happening and I went with it. Ash is skunty. Yeah.
Alayna
I believe the word you're looking for is skunty.
Ash
It's scary and cunty.
Alayna
Both me and Mikey have determin determined that she shall remain as such today. Oops, she opened.
Ash
That was my Diet Coke opening. Because that's a skunty behavior.
Alayna
She is in a place of skunt right now.
Ash
Serving skunt. Skunt. Skunt. Skunt.
Alayna
Truly, I don't know. Serving skunt.
Ash
We did magic this morning and I. We did. Why are you laughing?
Alayna
That's the truth. What? I don't know. We just did magic this morning.
Ash
There's more to it.
Alayna
There's more.
Ash
There's more. We did magic this morning and we did manifestations and I manifested self love and light and abundance. And I'm feeling all of those things.
Alayna
She's feeling abundant.
Ash
I think because mine went crazy.
Alayna
It did go crazy and I think
Ash
it just reignited my skunty soul. It said, baby. Party on, player.
Alayna
I think it's supposed. Is it astrologically? There's some. Some bullshit happening. Chiron's in retrograde. Exactly.
Ash
I don't know if it's Chiron or Chiron, so come at me, bro.
Alayna
But is that good or is that bad?
Ash
I think that's pretty bad. Oh, okay, hold on.
Alayna
That makes sense.
Ash
Let me do a little Google, do a little goo. I need to get it under her wraps.
Alayna
Do a little goie.
Ash
Yeah, it just went into retrograde. Oh. I'll tell you what it means for you and your astrological sign. Not all of you, but Capricorn's a Geminis.
Alayna
Yeah, let's go.
Ash
Accept the cookies because that's the only thing you're allowed to do in life.
Alayna
I always accept cookies in reality.
Ash
Yeah, obviously so. Considered an asteroid and a comet, Chiron Chiron begins its annual retrograde on July 26. It will take place as Chiron. Chiron is positioned in the first zodiac sign of Aries, where it has been since 2018. And it's going to last until the day after your birthday, Elena.
Alayna
Oh, day after your birthday.
Ash
The day of your birthday, Luna. So for me, Chiron, Chiron, retrograde holds a mirror to the medicine within you, medicine for yourself, which when claimed, becomes medicine for all. Like Chiron Chiron's mythological journey, retrograde is an invitation to step into the role of healer and observe how your experiences and the gold you have gleaned from them are your offering to the world.
Alayna
I like it.
Ash
I don't know if it resonates, but whatever.
Alayna
All you Geminis.
Ash
Germinas. No, Capricorn. Chiron, Chiron is a doorway between the spiritual and the human. And for the last six years, Chiron, Chiron. Six years. We've been doing the podcast for six years.
Alayna
Whoa.
Ash
Hopefully that's.
Alayna
I haven't read ahead, so I don't know what this is.
Ash
Has been cracking open the foundations of who you are so that you can remember yourself as this doorway, this retrograde, invites you deep within, traveling with you down into your roots, formative years and earlier memories. There is medicine here waiting for you. And I'm the medicine.
Alayna
Oh, my goodness.
Ash
Take a dose.
Alayna
Just a spoonful of sugar.
Ash
Also, just to. Just to say who I was reading that from. Oh, that would be. I'm the medicine. Take a dose.
Alayna
There it is. You found your housewives.
Ash
Let's go.
Alayna
T shirts.
Ash
Just to. Just to give credit where credit is due. That was from the yoga journal. Thanks.
Alayna
Yoga journal.
Ash
You're welcome.
Alayna
So, all you Capricorns in German, eyes out there. Now you know that one of you is the medicine and the other one needs it.
Ash
So wait. What a beautiful outside look. Glance at our relationship. I love that sometimes you're the medicine, though.
Alayna
I hope so. Sometimes I don't always need that. I don't always need the medicine.
Ash
You don't always need me.
Alayna
No, I'm. I'm asking, like. I'm like. Okay, good. I'm not the one that always needs the medicine. No, that's good.
Ash
Sometimes.
Alayna
Sometimes, no.
Ash
A lot of the time, all I need the medicine.
Alayna
Well, speaking of medicine and chaotic. Speaking of, you know, scientific advancements in medicine, we're going to talk about the radium girls today.
Ash
The radium Girls?
Alayna
Yes. So that. It's a. See, did you see that segue? We're talking about medicine and science and chemical elements and look at that. You know, it's there. But we're going to talk about the radium Girls today, everybody. This is a little different. It's a different true. Cry me. My tummy's growling. I don't know if anyone heard that.
Ash
It's digesting the eggplant. It is.
Alayna
I had. But this is a little different case because it's not like.
Ash
Is it like dark history?
Alayna
Sort of. Yeah, it's definitely. You know, most people would say a crime has occurred here.
Ash
You told me a couple of things
Alayna
and it sure sounds like it, but a different kind. So let's get into it, shall we? So we're going to start off first by kind of giving a brief, you know, look into what radium is, because I don't know if I know without understanding radium, this isn't going to hit as hard. I mean, it's going to hit, but you're going to be like, what the fuck is that?
Ash
Yeah.
Alayna
So in 1898, after spending years researching the radioactive nature of mineral pitchblende, of which uranium is a major element.
Ash
Okay?
Alayna
Polish French scientist, you might have heard of her, Marie Curie.
Ash
Marie Curie.
Alayna
Madame Curie.
Ash
I thought that sounded familiar.
Alayna
And a hubby, Pierre. Pierre. They concluded that the pitch blend contained at least two other previously undiscovered chemical elements. One of these elements was radium. Now, a lot of elements on the periodic table are freely occurring elements. Yes. Radium is not one of those. A freely occurring element is an element that is not combined with or chemically bonded with other chemical elements.
Ash
Okay?
Alayna
But radium instead is a byproduct produced in the decay of uranium, another radioactive Element.
Ash
Oh, okay. That's interesting.
Alayna
Yeah, See? So radium requires a very long process of isolation in order to be extracted. In fact, with the help of her laboratory assistant, Andre. I hope I say this right. Debierne.
Ash
Debierne.
Alayna
Debierne. Madame Curie required several tons of pitchblende before she was able to extract just one tenth of a gram of radium. Whoa. So it is. It was incredibly rare. So Curie's discovery of radium was notable for many reasons. One of the biggest was that it proved that there were other elements in nature that were not even discovered yet. Yeah.
Ash
That's so cool.
Alayna
They were like, holy shit. We didn't even know about this.
Ash
How cool that a woman found it.
Alayna
She's a. She's a badass.
Ash
Totally.
Alayna
Also, the discovery of radium served as the foundation of Curie's work in physics, which later she would get awarded a Nobel Prize in chemistry for. Wow. And in the years that followed, she spent the majority of her career focused on isolating pure metallic radium, which she achieved in 1910.
Ash
That must have been a little bit scary for her.
Alayna
Oh, yeah, she's a badass. Yeah, she did all kinds of shit. The girls have, like, one of those little, like, who was? Books on Marie Curie, and they also have, like, just like, a standalone book about Marie Curie, actually. So Marie Curie correctly theorized that among its potential uses, this new element she found could have important and, honestly, revolutionary applications in medicine. Oh, like, that's my segue. But the fact remained that it was really difficult and super costly to isolate and extract. It's not like this was easy to do.
Ash
Right.
Alayna
It was also true that, although not as well established or understood, radium was seriously hazardous and very difficult to handle. For instance, in 1901. This is crazy. In 1901, the Curies gave a fellow scientist a tiny little amount of radium to present at a conference in Paris. And before leaving for France, this man tucked. It was in a little vial. Yeah. Like a glass vial. So he tucked that vial into an interior pocket of his jacket, and then it exploded. It sealed, didn't open up. But the next time he undressed, he noticed a red mark on his stomach that appeared to be worsening in the hours and days that followed.
Ash
Oh, no.
Alayna
And according to author Kate Moore, she said, quote, it didn't get bigger, but it seemed somehow to get deeper, as though his body was still exposed to the source of the wound and the flame was burning him still.
Ash
Oh, my God.
Alayna
So what that scientist didn't know at the time was that he was experiencing a radiation burn from the tiny amount of radium in the vial that he and the curies believe was totally safely stored in there.
Ash
Wow.
Alayna
In fact, one of the other challenges of radium was that it has a relatively short shelf life and begins to break down really quickly, which is no bueno.
Ash
Yeah.
Alayna
Because it releases alpha, beta, and gamma radiation in the process, which is very damaging to living systems and tissue in unchecked amounts.
Ash
Okay.
Alayna
So while the glass vial itself might have been safely tucked away in his jacket, the element inside that vial was blasting out radiation waves directly into his skin.
Ash
Oh, my God. And probably like anybody that was even near him.
Alayna
Yeah. Other people could have been exposed.
Ash
Yeah.
Alayna
In this and other cases of minor exposure. And that's minor exposure, the injury appears like a worsening burn. Like, it keeps getting worse, but the body will heal itself on its own eventually when it's separated from the source. But in more severe cases or in cases of repeated exposure to this radiation, you can be disfigured or you can die. Wow. Cause as we'll see in this case of the radium girls, if it gets inside of you, it just keeps pumping out radiation. It's like it keeps getting lit and lit and lit. Like it doesn't heal. It won't allow your body to heal itself. Oh, that's so, like, minor wounds won't heal themselves. Oh, my God. You could get. If you're. If you ingest this radium and you scratched your arm, it wouldn't heal. You'd have an open wound forever, and that would be it.
Ash
What the.
Alayna
So despite the dangerous and costly risks associated with handling and extracting radium, it did seem like a huge thing of value for a lot of different avenues. Like, if we. If they could get it under control, particularly in manufacturing, in its process of decay, the particles inside of it charge one of its phosphorus components, zinc sulfide. And this causes what a lot of people know about radium. A green glow.
Ash
Okay.
Alayna
Phosphorescence kind of glow.
Ash
Yeah.
Alayna
Because the glow is a natural part of the process of decay of radium. It really. It didn't need an external source of power to make that happen, which is, like, a really ideal source of light for certain circumstances and environments. That being said, this luminescent glow was pretty minimal, and it continued to break down over time, so it was limited with how it could be used. But throughout the first decade of the 20th century, several extraction plants were established across the US to, like, harness the power of radium. Wow. Because they Were just like, what is this?
Ash
Like, what can we do with this?
Alayna
It fucking glows. Like, what do we do with this?
Ash
Cool, bruh.
Alayna
It glows like. We got this out, wiggy. Cool. Now, among those enthusiastic about the potential of radium was Dr. Sabin. I think it's Sabin. Arnold von Sashaki, who was a chemical scientist who in 1915 developed luminescent paint. The paint seemed to be an ideal use for radium since it really didn't require much radium to produce. And it could be used to paint clock and watch faces, instrument panels and other objects that really required minimal light to be seen in the dark. But it could make certain things glow. So you could, like, especially the clock faces. Like, I. If you've seen them from like the 50s and stuff. Like a clock with, like, that green glow. Yeah, that's that. Oh, okay. So that same year, Sashaki partnered with Dr. George Willis to establish the Radium Luminous Materials Corporation, which it was aimed at radium extraction and the production of luminescent paint. The next year, the company was renamed the United States Radium Corporation. And the mission was. The scope of the mission was narrowed to the production and application of the luminescent paint. And factories were then opened in Newark and Orange, New Jersey. So all of a sudden, radium is becoming a thing. Now. In the winter of 1917, a young girl named Catherine Schaub was like many of the girls who would come to work at US Radium. She was intelligent, she was very enthusiastic, and she was driven to achieve great, great things in her life.
Ash
Nice.
Alayna
At just 14 years old, she decided to act on a tip about jobs in the paint application department of US Radium. So she quit her job at the department store she was working at, walked into the plant manager's office and convinced that man to hire her.
Ash
Hell, yeah, girl.
Alayna
Which, like, what a badass.
Ash
At 14 years old.
Alayna
Absolutely, yeah. Throughout much of the 20th century, factories and manufacturing jobs were honestly among the most reliable sources of employment for working class Americans of all ages, really. Particularly those with poor education or limited specialty skills.
Ash
Sure.
Alayna
Still, the work tended to be, like, tedious, kind of menial, dangerous. So the jobs were not very coveted. They were just things like, everybody can do this. The painting jobs at US Radium, on the other hand, seem to offer something a little more exciting than the typical factory assembly line job. So what Catherine had said was the work was interesting and of a far higher type than the usual factory job. Because unlike factory floors, which were, like, dirty, loud, dangerous, just like, not where you want to Be the application rooms at US Radium were referred to as a studio. Oh, where's the talent? Yeah, like, they really knew how to market these jobs. And this was where talented young women with a steady hand and creativity, they worked with an exciting new product called luminescent paint. And at a time when it was being touted as, quote, a wonder element, radium, and selling for $120,000 per gram, which is roughly $3 million in 2024.
Ash
Blink, blink, blink, blink.
Alayna
The opportunity to work with radium was very thrilling. Absolutely. Very exciting. Very, like, oh my good. Like glamorous even. Especially those who would never have access to it otherwise. And honestly, they got like, I think they got something like three times the amount they would get in a normal factory. Like, very well paid and it was just like known. And I think they hired a certain. They wanted a certain look for these factory. So they really went for like the whole vibe of this whole thing.
Ash
This is so interesting.
Alayna
Very interesting. The job was simple enough at its core.
Ash
Okay.
Alayna
The pre printed paper clock watch and instrument dials came in and they came in, in like a large stack. And each girl would work as quickly as they could to apply the luminescent paint to the letters and numbers on the dial and giving them that glow that we know. But for girls like Katherine Schaub, the girl was. The job was so much more than just, you know, painting lines on a paper as fast as she could. In addition to applying the paint, each dial painter was responsible for mixing her own paint, which meant adding a small amount of the radium powder to water and gum adhesive to create the glowing paint. That was marketed as Undark full.
Ash
Okay.
Alayna
Which I'm like, who came up with that name?
Ash
Undark?
Alayna
Because they're like, it glows so it's not.
Ash
Not dark, let's call it.
Alayna
Which means you're making it undark. Like, okay. As they worked though, the radium powder got everywhere. It covered the studio and it covered the painters in a fine coating of what they thought was this fancy fucking powder. Oh, God, that's. It's rare. It's this wonder element. And I'm covered in it, you know, like, and it's just like. And it's not dirty. It makes you glow.
Ash
Yeah.
Alayna
Like, it's got a luminescence to it. You almost look like you're sparkling. It's like, like what we would use,
Ash
like, highlighter for now.
Alayna
Exactly. It's got that, like, vibe to it. So I think it had this whole mystique that they were Definitely feeding into now. The work of a dial painter wasn't just a matter of chemistry and, honestly, speed, because they wanted them to do it as fast as they could. It also required a little bit of skill and a lot of creativity because the products created by us, radium from wristwatches, instrument panels, you know, clocks for the wall, they were really small, these little elements that they had to paint. And often they had these, like, tiny little details. But these tiny details were really critical to their operation, and if they were going to be used or not. Like, for example, the smallest pocket watches that they produce measured just three and a half centimeters across the face.
Ash
Wow.
Alayna
And, like. So the tiny, tiny, little, like, millimeter things, they had to paint.
Ash
Yeah.
Alayna
They couldn't just, like, swipe it over it. They had to, like, trace the thing. So to ensure accuracy, dial painters worked with really tiny brushes. They were like camel hair brushes, and they had to be capable of doing the finest details. So one painter said, I had never seen a brush as fine as that. I would say it possibly had about 30 hairs in it. It was exceptionally fine. Wow. Because the consequences of an error could be very costly to the company. You know, accuracy and consistency in these little tiny details was very, very, very important. The brushes were delicate and slim, for sure, as we hear, but the bristles would, like, spread out after a while, like any brush, you know, they just get worn.
Ash
Especially when you're working quickly, I'm sure.
Alayna
Exactly. Because you're really doing this as fast as you can. That was gonna make mistakes happen. So what Shab said was we put the brushes in our mouths because that was a technique they had made up called lip pointing. And it was passed down from the earliest dial painters, who were themselves hired away from their previous jobs as painters of china dolls. So they were. They could do those fine details. Lip pointing was when the painter would wet the bristles of the brush with their lips or their tongue.
Ash
Oh, God.
Alayna
Pressing those bristles together to make that fine tip, like we would with, like, a regular brush. You know, like, you just to get
Ash
it really thin, not covered in radium.
Alayna
No. The girls, totally unbeknownst to them, while lip pointing was the standard practice in the US it was not that way in Europe. In fact, European manufacturers had completely abandoned brushes altogether because they ended up using, like, implements that would hold that fine point so they wouldn't have to do that.
Ash
Okay.
Alayna
Like glass rods, sharpened sticks, even, like, metal needles.
Ash
Always more advanced.
Alayna
And it didn't ever cross the girl's mind that putting the brush covered in radioactive material in their mouths could be dangerous. Because while the dial workers were hard at work in the factory, wealthy and elite people all over the nation were saying how radium is the greatest discovery in the ages. Like, they used it in glassware and lingerie and toothpaste. Miracle cures were being made with it. Like, oh, my God. It was being touted as, like, the fucking cure all. Like, this is going to be the thing that changes everything. So why the fuck wouldn't you think it's in toothpaste? Why can't it be in my mouth?
Ash
Even though it had literally, like, in a contained small vial, like, burned that man.
Alayna
Yeah, that.
Ash
That. They just didn't release that information or
Alayna
a lot of this is sh.
Ash
Why? Yeah.
Alayna
One product actually marketed to men at this time was a tonic that they said restored vitality to the elderly, making old men young.
Ash
I don't know about that, baby.
Alayna
So if you can drink it as a tonic.
Ash
Oh, my God, of course you can
Alayna
quickly put a fucking brush that's been dipped in it on your lips for a second. Why wouldn't you? And from. And the thing is, they were being told by the people who own these corporations and factories it is completely safe.
Ash
Right.
Alayna
Stick it in your mouth, it's fine. Put it on your, like, whatever you like. This radium isn't going to hurt you.
Ash
Oh, God.
Alayna
They were told it's beautiful.
Ash
Look at it.
Alayna
Yeah, look, it glows. You're sparkly. So they were like, okay. Why wouldn't they believe that?
Ash
Yeah, no, totally.
Alayna
So from the moment the curies isolated and extracted radium from uranium, it was apparent the element was dangerous and destructive. Like you just mentioned, it burned a guy's stomach just being in a glass vial in his pocket.
Ash
Yep.
Alayna
The problem, it seems, was a matter of communication more than the actual knowledge that everyone had. So Georgetown radiation expert Timothy Jorgensen said people knew that radioactivity released energy, and they didn't see how adding some energy to their bodies could possibly be harmful.
Ash
Okay.
Alayna
They just weren't.
Ash
Yeah. Science wasn't that advanced.
Alayna
And they just weren't told that, like, this isn't the kind of energy you want to be adding to your body.
Ash
Right. Like, there's good energy and bad energy.
Alayna
Yeah. In fact, despite the price of products containing radium, enthusiasm for the products seemed to be never ending. I mean, it had, like, boundless potential to be everything. For example, advertisements for radithor, a health tonic, sold the elixir as a cure for the living dead and perpetual sunshine. And it promised to cure everything from arthritis to gout.
Ash
Wow.
Alayna
Yeah. So it was like the thing in the public's understanding, or probably better labeled. And Dave said this, which is very true. Public misunderstanding. It was a, it was a catastrophic misunderstanding by the public because of the people on top. Right? The people on top were causing this misunderstanding because they just wanted to get shit. Go. Yeah, exactly. The public's misunderstanding of radium seems probably like we're looking at this today in 2024. Goggles being like, oh my God, like, why are you not understanding that radioactivity is bad? But in the early part of the 20th century, when most people's education stopped after grammar school, scientific knowledge was pretty limited, like you said. And as is often the case today, people just keyed in on buzzwords and associated scientific discovery with human progress. And of course it's going to be unquestionably positive. Right. Like we're all progressing, we're evolving, this is great technology. And as a result, the public honestly rarely questioned, and we've seen this in a few cases, they rarely questioned whether products containing radium, radium was safe. And they've done that throughout history. We've seen, I mean, look at arsenic eaters. Like there's all kinds of times when they're just being led to believe that this is fine by all these companies pushing these products on people. And it's easy to go along with the flow and think that you're being told the truth when. And not questioning. That's why it's important to question.
Ash
Especially because something has a seemingly desirable outcome.
Alayna
Exactly. That's exactly it. Now, quite the opposite, in fact. They developed a rabid enthusiasm for the fad of consuming radium based products whenever possible. So it really went the other way. And in the radium dial factories where the dial painters were in literal constant contact with the powder and paint, enthusiasm for radium was at an all time high. In fact, some of the girls actually liked consuming the small amounts of paint because they liked the way it tasted.
Ash
Oh, that's interesting.
Alayna
Yeah. Apparently it tasted good.
Ash
It's like pica.
Alayna
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
Ash
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Alayna
Now, the problem, of course, was that radium was literally anything that's safe. It was everything unsafe.
Ash
Quite the opposite.
Alayna
And although it did have promising applications in medicine because we are able to harness very unsafe chemicals. Yeah. When, you know, people know how to do that and make them safe, you know, like. But by itself, no, it wasn't, you know, it wasn't as a tonic or other health fad. Like, they wasn't being safe in those usages. Medicine, sure. You're gonna figure out a way to make that safe. Tonics, health fads, all that, like, toothpastes and shit. No, we're not getting it right there. And by the time World War I was in full swing, the radium plants and their dial painters were working overtime to meet growing demand for these clocks, watches, all this stuff. Yet at the same time that these young women were inhaling and consuming small amounts of radium, Marie Curie and her husband were beginning to understand the destructive power of the element that they discovered.
Ash
Oh, man.
Alayna
And it was true that radium had the ability, which is. I mean, incredible. It has the ability to destroy tumors and other cancerous growths. That's where we get radiation. Like, that's. Of course, we look at it today and we say, like, where would we be?
Ash
Right.
Alayna
You know? But the more they worked with it, the more they began to recognize that its power to do that was indiscriminate. It was just as likely to destroy healthy cells as it was to destroy health unhealthy. So it's like, this is not what we're looking for. We just need to harness it the correct way, and we have not. And it's like, now the whole world is just, like, eating this shit up. So it wasn't just the curies who knew it either. The founder of US Radium, Dr. Sabin Arnold von Sashaki, had also become very, very familiar with the destructive power of radium.
Ash
How familiar?
Alayna
Yeah. According to author Kate Moore, who. We will cite the sources in the notes, of course, early in the company's history, radium had actually gotten into Von Shashaki's left index finger. And she said, quote, when he realized he hacked the tip of it off, saying it now looked as though an animal had grown, had gnawed it. What this was because according to Timothy Jorgensen, radium behave. Behaves very much like calcium. Because the body is accustomed to using calcium to build bone. It will recognize radium as a kind of calcium, and so it will absorb the radioactive material into your bone and then it will just begin to decay your bone.
Ash
What the fuck?
Alayna
Because it mistakes it for calcium. So it just takes it regenerating and thinks it needs to like push it out to the rest of your body to reabsorb calcium. And that's why it just destroys, because it just gets pumped out.
Ash
That's horrifying. But it's also so fascinating. Exactly. That your body can't tell the difference.
Alayna
Isn't it wild?
Ash
Yeah. Like, the body's so smart, obviously, and like there are miraculous things that the body does. But then to have something be fully dangerous enter your system and to just be like, oh, calcium.
Alayna
Yeah.
Ash
Like body.
Alayna
No let body know. But this is all to say, within at least a few years of founding his company, US Radium, Von Shishake knew radium based paint was highly toxic and extraordinarily dangerous.
Ash
You just got so Boston extreme. Extraordinarily.
Alayna
I don't know how to say that.
Ash
Extraordinarily.
Alayna
Extraordinarily.
Ash
That was great. Okay, Papa.
Alayna
Extraordinarily dangerous. But he kept that little bit of knowledge from his employees. Oh, good. Which is eating the paint. Fucked up, to say the very, very least. Yup. In fact, as soon as most painters were introduced to the lip pointing technique, most inquired as to whether the paint was, you know, in any way harmful. That was everybody's first question.
Ash
They're like, cool that I do this or. Huh?
Alayna
Because that's the thing. Like, it's not that. Like these girls walked in there and were just like, chemicals. Sure, I'll just eat it. Like, they, they asked the people in charge, the people who should be telling them, whether these things are dangerous.
Ash
Right.
Alayna
And these people, all their managers would say, go for it. It's completely safe. And knowing it wasn't, knowing how bad it was. Now, within a few years, many dial painters in the New Jersey factories had actually become like local celebrities. Like, this was a glamorous thing.
Ash
Wow, that's so crazy.
Alayna
Isn't that wild?
Ash
Yes.
Alayna
Because unlike traditional factory workers, like I was saying before, they had kind of a vibe. They were going for they had a look. They were young, attractive, and those that earned a decent wage were often happy to spend at least some of that money to, you know, look good. They were getting the latest fashion. So they were. They were always looked at as these glamazons that just, like, work in this. This studio painting with luminescent paint. And they always come out cover, you know, like, it was, like, this whole vibe. And above all else, it was the radium itself that made these girls instantly recognizable as being radium girls who worked in those. In the factories. Yeah. Because during their hours spent in the studio, like we said before, it was impossible to not get radium dust all over you, in your hair, on your clothes. So when they would leave work for the day, they had an unmistakable neon glow.
Ash
Stop it.
Alayna
So they would walk out of there as the sun's going down, and they're glowing, Literally. Yeah. Edna. A painter, Edna Bowles, said, when I would go home at night, my clothing would shine in the dark. You could see where I was, my hair, my face. The girls shone like the watches did in the dark room.
Ash
Wow.
Alayna
So, like, you just watch this, like, line of beautiful young girls.
Ash
Glowing. Come out glowing, physically, legitimately, in every sense of the word, glowing.
Alayna
Like, that must have been like. Of course. You want to just, like, idolize this whole situation. It just must seem so, like, otherworldly and like.
Ash
It does. Yes. It absolutely does. Like, ethereal. Yeah.
Alayna
Like, some of the. The young women and girls would wear clothing to work that they wanted to wear to the dance later, like, on Fridays. And they would do that so they would get the radium glow on that dress that they wanted to wear. And then later at the dance, they would be fucking glowing on the dance floor.
Ash
So everybody's like, who?
Alayna
So everybody's like, there's that radium girl. And it's like, they. This was awesome. It was, like a thing. But not everyone was as enthusiastic about the job or the effects of working with the paint.
Ash
Okay.
Alayna
According to Moore, some found the paint made them sick. One woman even got sores on her mouth after just a month of working there. And within a few years, even those who love their jobs, like Catherine Schaub, they started to notice that there were certain reactions that they were having trouble explaining. After just a year in the studio, Catherine started getting really bad acne and went to go see a doctor. And at first, the doctor was like, oh, you know, puberty. You were. You're 15. So the doctor was like, you know, you're 15 years old. It's probably puberty.
Ash
Yeah.
Alayna
But then he ran some simple blood tests just to make sure everything was on the up and up. And he noticed some pretty unusual changes that he'd seen in other factory workers, and he said they were ones that had been exposed to high levels of phosphorus.
Ash
Okay.
Alayna
And as far as Catherine knew, she didn't work with or even near any phosphorus. So the anomalies in the blood were just kind of like, this is perplexing. That's weird. That's suspicious. Neither Catherine nor any of the other girls knew it, but they were working in very close proximity to phosphorus, and it was beginning to affect them physically.
Ash
Oh, God.
Alayna
This was part of the whole thing, right? The symptoms. But they weren't told that the symptoms of radiation poisoning were alarming to Catherine and her co workers. But their minds were then set at ease because Dr. Von Shishaki's partner, Dr. George Willis, told them there was nothing to worry about. Don't worry about. It has nothing to do with your job.
Ash
Shut up. Stop going to the doctor.
Alayna
Literally. Look over here. Shut up. As Moore pointed out, when one of the greatest radium authorities tells you that you have no need to worry, quite simply, you don't worry.
Ash
Yeah.
Alayna
Yeah. In fact, Willis's reassurances were so comforting that the girls even began to laugh off the increasing frequency of weird occurrences. Like, they were just kind of like, whoa, this is so weird. Like, can't have anything to do with this.
Ash
Oh, God.
Alayna
Including painter Grace Fryer, who recalled, quote, nasal discharges on my handkerchief used to be luminous in the dark.
Ash
What?
Alayna
Yeah.
Ash
So her boogers were shining.
Alayna
Were shining.
Ash
Oh, my God.
Alayna
Sometimes, for fun or to make each other laugh, the girls would paint their faces, their nails, and even their teeth with the radium paint. No.
Ash
Oh, my God.
Alayna
Yeah. Now, despite their employer's insistence that everything was on the up and up, everything is entirely, completely. Don't worry about it.
Ash
Couldn't be safer.
Alayna
Could not be safer. The fact remained that many people, painters and ordinary citizens, were continuing to get sick. Some, like the worker who complained of the mouth sores after a mouth.
Ash
Yeah.
Alayna
Showed signs of radiation burns. While others had more complicated problems. Because radiation burns, at least, you know, like that. That scientist. When you're taken away from the radiation, usually your body can heal itself. But others had more complicated problems, like bone deterioration. Some girls took their concerns straight to their regular doctors. But because radiation poisoning and radiation burns were so uncommon, their symptoms and injuries were, like, mostly misdiagnosed as other things. Others who went to their managers or company Doctors were just ignored. Or worse, they would just. The company doctors or managers would just misdiagnose them with sexually transmitted diseases. Are you kidding me? To smear the reputations of the women
Ash
knowing full well what was actually happening.
Alayna
Yep. And they would do this to smear the reputations of them, to discourage them from disclosing their symptoms to anyone else. Because if you are being told by your company doctor you have a sexually transmitted disease in the 1920s, oh, my God. And you're. He's gonna be like, go right ahead, go talk to your doctor about it. Like, you're not going to tell anyone else. You're gonna be. You're being shamed at that point.
Ash
So evil.
Alayna
Yep. And given all the ways that the dial painters were exposed to radium, it was dentists who usually heard about the first symptoms, because, remember, a lot of that is going in the mouth area. Beginning in the late 1910s, girls were showing up at their dentist's office with complaints of tooth pain. Loose teeth, ulcers were showing up. And in more extreme cases where the teeth had to be pulled, dental surgeons started noticing that the sockets wouldn't heal. They would just stay an open wound and not heal. And then they would become infected.
Ash
Right. Of course. It's your fucking mouth.
Alayna
And they were like, what the fuck is this? And these symptoms, caused by exposure to radium and its tendency to decay bone matter, were eventually lumped together into what was informally referred to as radium jaw. You can Google radium jaw at your own risk.
Ash
Is it horrible?
Alayna
It's just very upsetting.
Ash
I'm about to.
Alayna
So when the war ended in late 1918, demand for radium dials decreased, like, dramatic decrease, as did the need for so many dial painters. We didn't need as many. Yeah. Mikey and Ash just looked it up.
Ash
Oh, my God.
Alayna
At the same time, you had a. Yeah, that's the one. That's the one.
Ash
Huh?
Alayna
That's the one. Oh, this is just a total jaw gone. You both did the same gasp at the same time.
Ash
We're both airsome. Both.
Alayna
You went. And I knew. You both looked. Yeah. Again, at your own risk. It's graphic and upsetting.
Ash
It's so upsetting that people knew how dangerous this was. And they were like, yeah, go for it. Drink the tonic.
Alayna
Yeah, just stick that brush in your mouth. But, yeah. So while there was still a demand for luminescent watches, as the war ended in 1918, that demand was not enough to keep the hundreds of dial painters employed. Like, there was a lot of dial painters so the companies, including US Radium, cut back the workforce.
Ash
Okay.
Alayna
Still used them, though. And many of the painters who were then in their late teens and early 20s chose to quit their jobs and get married and start families. But this started a second wave of really scary symptoms. Now that these girls are saying, well, I want to start a family.
Ash
Right.
Alayna
Even before attempting to get pregnant and have children, many of the painters had noticed that they had very strange changes to their menstrual cycles.
Ash
Yeah, I would.
Alayna
Yep. And then when they began trying to get pregnant, they struggled to conceive and eventually learned that they were sterile.
Ash
Oh, my God.
Alayna
How heartbreaking. Yeah. And finally, many of the women who were able to conceive somehow were soon absolutely heartbroken by stillbirths, by miscarriages, and by, quote, deformities in body structure of their babies.
Ash
That's so fucked.
Alayna
The far reaching consequences of this are astronomical.
Ash
Truly.
Alayna
The first Death came in 1922, but only after a long. And when I tell you, excruciating, I mean, excruciatingly painful illness by this person.
Ash
Oh, no.
Alayna
A year earlier, 1921, in September, former dial painter girl Molly Maja had visited her dentist and she had to have a tooth removed because she had pain. Weeks later, however, she was still experiencing pain and that socket had not healed weeks later. So she went back to the dentist who diagnosed her with pyoria, which is an inflammatory disease of the gums.
Ash
Okay.
Alayna
And started treating her for that. Weeks later, however, it got worse and so had her intense lower jaw pain. To everyone around her, it was very clear she was in terrible pain as her teeth were literally slowly and visibly rotting in her jaw. Oh, God. For no reason at all like that, everybody could see, but the doctor could not figure out why this was happening.
Ash
That must have been so terrifying for her to have, like, suddenly start experiencing that and then have your doctor have no.
Alayna
No idea why, no way to stop it. You're in intense pain all the time and you're just this young girl, like, so, yeah. As far as her dentist, Dr. Joseph Neff, could tell, he said it was almost like something was attacking her from the inside, but he couldn't tell what. Whatever was affecting Molly's teeth soon spread to her jaw and caused necrosis. Molly's teeth and jaw were literally rotting. And in fact, at one point, and this is very graphic, just so you know, at one point, the dentist literally used his fingers to literally pull pieces of her jaw out because it just crumbled like dust in his hands. I. Yeah.
Ash
Oh.
Alayna
Like open Wounds in her mouth. Oh, my God. And he just essentially scooped her jaw out with his hands, unintentionally, but it just crumbled to dust.
Ash
Feel your jaw, like, feel how, like, thick and dense your jaw is.
Alayna
I mean, your mandible is made to crush and to withstand some pressure.
Ash
Like, think about that.
Alayna
You're supposed to be able to, like, really gnaw down on things and use it as, like, a.
Ash
Just scooped it.
Alayna
It just turned to dust. Because that's what it does. It destroys the cells.
Ash
And then you're just disfigured.
Alayna
Oh, yeah. But beyond the unbearable physical pain she experienced, the rapid decay of her mouth was accompanied also. And this is just so upsetting by a very noticeable odor of literal decay.
Ash
Yeah, of course.
Alayna
Flesh and bone.
Ash
Think about, like, you have, like, a cavity, and you're like, oh, I got to brush my teeth. Extra.
Alayna
Yes. But hers is literally rotting.
Ash
Like, it's like.
Alayna
Yes, essentially.
Ash
And then her gums, too. Everything.
Alayna
So she had this intense embarrassment that made her not want to be even around people and out of ideas. Her dentist visited the radium plant and asked for the ingredients in the compound, just hoping to clue in on her problem. But the managers at the plant were uncooperative and refused to provide any information about the paint to him. That's how you know, pieces of absolute shit, those people. And the situation continued to confound her doctor, her dentist, Dr. Neff, and those with whom he was consulting. He was trying to get anybody to, like. He stopped at nothing to try to get some answers here also, just to
Ash
think that they were like, yeah, no, we're not going to tell you. If this is happening to one girl, this is obviously going to other people, too. Like, you're going to run into some shit, so you might as well shut
Alayna
down production and just be on it. Like, try to save some people.
Ash
Yeah, like, call an L and l. Yeah.
Alayna
So Dr. Neff said whenever a portion of the affected bone was removed, instead of arresting the course of necrosis, it speeded it up. By the fall of 1922, Molly's condition had worsened, and her entire jaw, having largely disintegrated at this point, was removed. And they had to remove pieces of her inner ear as well.
Ash
And then it's like, can you even. She probably couldn't even speak anymore.
Alayna
Oh. And it gets worse again, I'm going to tell you, this gets very, very graphic. Even more graphic. It was at that time that doctors discovered whatever had affected Molly's teeth and jaw had now spread and Was eating away at her throat.
Ash
Oh, my God.
Alayna
So they were unable to stop this, which is horrifying, because they just could once. Radiation. Once it's in there, what do you. Can't do anything. Like, it's. It's happening. So they weren't able to stop whatever was eating away at Molly. At Molly's entire body at this point. And in September, the disease slowly ate its way through her jugular vein.
Ash
Oh, my God.
Alayna
On September 12th, a little past 5pm Molly's jugular vein erupted because it had been eaten away, hemorrhaging blood so fast that her sister, who was by her side while she was in bed, could do nothing but watch her bleed to death and choke on her own blood. It was literally a river of blood pouring from her mouth, and she just choked to death on her own blood.
Ash
That's literally, like, something she drowned in her own blood. Oh, my God.
Alayna
Yeah. Like, that is one of the most horrific things I have ever heard.
Ash
100%. Just this young girl.
Alayna
Yeah.
Ash
Her body just gets eaten by.
Alayna
They're all, like, in their early 20s, sometimes late teens. Like, they're young.
Ash
Oh, my God.
Alayna
And. Yeah.
Ash
And her poor family to watch that happen. And her doctor. Like, obviously, you're a doctor. You feel a responsibility to help somebody. And this man did everything he could. Yeah, he just couldn't do anything.
Alayna
They just threw up roadblocks to him and let Molly die.
Ash
And at that point, even if they had found out what was causing it, I don't know. Like, how can you stop that? Yeah, you can't.
Alayna
You. You can't. Not that I just, like, you can't, because that's the problem. Like, I. I had mentioned this before, and we were shocked by it how, like, your body mistakes radium for calcium,
Ash
so it just keeps going.
Alayna
So. Because they're very. I guess they're chemically very similar, they can be mistaken by the, you know, your body.
Ash
Body.
Alayna
But so when it tries to infuse that radium into the bones like it does with calcium, alpha particles are released by the radium, and that infuses into your bones. And that's what. Those are the kind of things that cause all these awful things like cancer. Like, many of these girls, many of these young women got, like, different kind of cancers later in life, and they all caused bones to disintegrate and rot and just. It spreads like wildfire. And then you can't stop it, really.
Ash
It's so scary how delicate the human body is.
Alayna
And after Molly's funeral, the family spoke to Dr. Neff to try to find out what happened, which is when they were informed that although he had kept the diagnosis from her at the time, he hadn't told Molly. He said he was diagnosing her with the only thing he knew to do. And the only thing that he had been told was the cause of this, which was syphilis.
Ash
I was thinking you were gonna say that, but she did not.
Alayna
Because that's what they would do. They would just label it something like that. The company, as you can imagine, was the US Radium, was very excited to be able to use that cop out as c. It wasn't radium poisoning. It was syphilis. And it's not our fault. Yeah.
Ash
Wrong.
Alayna
When they know that wasn't the real cause. No.
Ash
Now to do that to her in death, like, are you kidding me?
Alayna
And the worst thing is it's like they would have like a coroner's jury at this time where, like it was just like laymen on a jury that would like, all agree on the cause of. You know, I mean, like it was well done. So it's like doctors or anything like that. Exactly. Which that does change, luckily. But that's good now. As Molly was dying in New Jersey, hundreds of girls in Ottawa, Illinois started lining up for what were promised to be glamorous jobs as painters at the Radium Dial Company. Like US Radium. The Radium Dial Company produced luminescent clock and watch faces using the same lip pointing technique as the girls in New Jersey. And we. It's not like we have social media where everyone's gonna blast out what the happening in New Jersey over here. Right. So now over in Illinois, they have no clue.
Ash
Oh my God.
Alayna
Yeah. And despite the employment's employment ads stated goal of hiring several girls 18 years or over, many of the painters at Radium dial were under 18, some as young as 11 years old.
Ash
Oh my God. And to think what that's gonna do to an 11 year old.
Alayna
You have no chance at that point. None. Like the girls at US Radium, the new painters at Radium Dial quickly became, you know, local celebrities in Ottawa, making the job and making Radium seem very glamorous. According to one local paper, the girls were the envy of the others in the little Illinois town. When they stepped out with their boyfriends at night, their dresses and hats and sometimes even their hands and faces aglow with the phosphorescence of the luminous paint. Like that. Like that sounds awesome. Like anybody would be like, holy, I want a circle for my job.
Ash
Yeah.
Alayna
However, unlike U.S. radium product and material waste didn't seem to be a priority at Radium Dial.
Ash
Okay.
Alayna
Us Radium is or was, but radium. Radium Dial, worse. Didn't give a about how dangerous this substance was. The girls frequently covered themselves in radium powder, entertained each other with the paint during their lunch hours, and even took vials home with them Here. Yeah. Darlene Halm, whose aunt worked at Radium Dial, told a reporter, I can remember my family talking about my aunt bringing home the little vials of radium paint. They would go into their bedroom with the lights off and paint their fingernails, their eyelids, their lips, and they'd laugh at each other because they glowed in the dark right at home.
Ash
Like it's just entertaining. And then you think of. They're affecting everybody at home too, without even knowing it.
Alayna
Yeah, exactly. Now, Holmes, Aunt Peg Looney was one of the first girls hired as a painter at Radium Dial Company in 2020. 2020.
Ash
19.
Alayna
1922 when they opened. And like so many of the others, 17 year old Peg loved the job. Found it so exciting and glamorous. Also, like the others, Peg's boss at Radium Dial told her and all the other painters that the paint was completely safe, not harmful at all. Quite the opposite, in fact. They, she said, quote, they told the girls it would make them beautiful.
Ash
Yeah.
Alayna
So they actually were encouraging it. But within a few years, it became clear that they were not being given the correct information. Within a few years of taking the job, Peg Looney started having health problems that one would not be typically associate with a young woman barely out of her teens.
Ash
Okay.
Alayna
Like many of the other painters, it all started when Peg going to the dentist and having a tooth taken out.
Ash
Oh, no.
Alayna
The procedure was intended to relieve some of the jaw pain that she had been experiencing. But in the days and weeks after that, the pain got worse. The extraction site still didn't heal. Things only got worse from there. And soon after, her jaw pain became so bad and pieces of teeth and jawbone started falling out of her mouth regularly.
Ash
Oh, my God.
Alayna
Yes. Like so many others, Peg's teeth and jaw problems soon spread to other areas of her body. She became anemic. She couldn't walk due to crippling pain.
Ash
Oh, my God.
Alayna
Holmes said her fiance used to pull her around the neighborhood in a wagon when she was too ill to walk. Oh, and this is her in her early 20s.
Ash
Yeah.
Alayna
One day in 1928, Peg collapsed at work. And the managers in Radium Dial made sure she was rushed to the company hospital.
Ash
I bet.
Alayna
In fact, Holmes said my grandparents and her siblings had no say about her going to the company hospital and we were not allowed to visit. What the fuck?
Ash
Just the fact that there was company hospitals is even terrifying.
Alayna
Yeah. They were told she had diphtheria and was quarantined.
Ash
What?
Alayna
Peg Looney died in the Radium Dial hospital at just 24 years old.
Ash
24. And her parents didn't even get to visit this year.
Alayna
And according to her niece, the Radium Dial company insisted that Peg be buried right away and started making preparations.
Ash
Yeah, I bet.
Alayna
But by then, the family was very suspicious that the company might be trying to hide something. So one of them badasses that they are, they intervened and insisted the family be allowed to give Peg a Catholic burial.
Ash
Yeah.
Alayna
And the company relented and even agreed to allow to have an autopsy performed in the presence of Looney's doctor. But when the doctor arrived at the scheduled time, they said, oh, the autopsy has already been completed. Oh, didn't find anything. It was just diphtheria.
Ash
Oh, yeah, totally. But yeah, for sure.
Alayna
This is so shady.
Ash
As big companies usually.
Alayna
Yep.
Ash
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Alayna
Peg was just the first of many Radium Dial painters to become ill with mysterious illnesses, and the company just kept attempting to minimize them or cover them up. In 1925, another painter, Catherine Donahue, also started feeling sick and experiencing incredible pain in her hip that actually caused a limp. And in 1931, radium dial fired Donahue because, quote, my limping was causing much talk. She and she told a reporter that in 1938, her story was like so many others. Her pain soon spread. Parts of her jaw started falling out of her fucking head. And she eventually became bedridden and unable to walk. And the local doctor was unable to diagnose her illness. They just had no idea what was going on, but insisted that she did have some kind of radium poisoning. But nobody could prove it.
Ash
That's good though, that at least they were like, nope, you definitely do.
Alayna
Exactly. There were several more women with teeth bone jaw issues. One woman's vertebrae disintegrated from radium incorporation into her bones. Just turned to fucking dust in her back and she collapsed her vertebrae. Her vertebrae turned to dust in her body. Poof. Oh my God. That's your whole ass spine being compromised by poof turning to dust.
Ash
And you'll never ever be the same after that.
Alayna
Now. Back in New Jersey, the deaths of Molly Maja and growing number of illnesses among the dial painters set off a wave of speculation that the cause might be related to the radium paint. Finally.
Ash
Yeah.
Alayna
A former painter, Quinta McDonald, said many of the girls I knew and had worked with in the plant began to die off alarmingly fast. And in response, US Radium hired a Harvard trained physiologist consultant in 1924 to evaluate the situation.
Ash
You know what's happening?
Alayna
Oh, yeah, don't worry. They had a plan. When his report to management contained incredibly profoundly negative results and dire, dire warnings. The company just issued a fake positive report under the consultant's name. And they submitted that.
Ash
Are you kidding me?
Alayna
Under that consultant's name.
Ash
Lengths these motherfuckers were willing to go to to make a quick buck.
Alayna
True pieces of absolute garbage. And they submitted that to the New Jersey Department of Labor under that consultant's name. They just lied.
Ash
And he's like, he said that?
Alayna
He said it was positive.
Ash
That's not at all what I said.
Alayna
Yeah. Despite US Radium's vast efforts to cover up the dangers posed by radium in their plants, the consequences were becoming undeniable. Like, they're not going to be able to cover this up forever.
Ash
Everyone is literally dying after they work at your factory or while working at your factory.
Alayna
They're literally disintegrating like they're litters are disintegrating in front of everybody.
Ash
God, when you actually say that and think about like you're not being hyperbolic. People are disintegrating.
Alayna
They're rotting, decaying.
Ash
Oh my God.
Alayna
In 1925, a statistician with the prudential insurance company started documenting the numerous illnesses reported by employees with the company, including the many jaw and teeth infections reported in two dead and 12 living painters. A short time later, the County Medical Examiner, Dr. Harrison Martland, documented his, quote, detection of gamma rays from living dial painters and the exhalation of radon from their lungs. He took it upon himself, actually, Dr. Martland, he took it upon himself to help prove that these young women were being poisoned by radium in the paint that they were working with and that it was the cause of their suffering and eventual death. Wow. Dr. Martin was able to show that radium outside of the body is enough to burn, obviously, like we've seen, and cause harm. But when ingested into the body, it is so much worse because it will continue to create and give off radiation essentially forever. Oh, my God. It just keeps destroying the living cells around it. It doesn't allow anything to heal. And he said this substance they were told was harmless, Was now basically punching holes into their bones as they walked around. Nope. And let me tell you, the corporations tried to discredit him, but he was relentless, Even getting the coroner's jury system abolished to create a more knowledgeable and credible basis for these women to plead their case in court. Eventually, before the year was over, there was another death. This time it was the sister of one of the US Radium dial painters whose sole contact with radium was sharing a bed with her.
Ash
That's it.
Alayna
Her sister.
Ash
Are you serious?
Alayna
Sharing a bed with her. And she died.
Ash
Nothing happened to the. The sister who was working there.
Alayna
She was also going through it.
Ash
Oh.
Alayna
But just sharing a bed with her. She never had direct contact with radio was enough to. To kill her.
Ash
Oh.
Alayna
Due to the growing number of problems with the staff and the decline in demand for the product, in 1926, u. S. Radium cease production. And closed the plants in New Jersey and moved their entire operation to New York. But by then the damage had been done and it was becoming unavoidable. The previous year, former dial painter Grace fryer was one of those who the medical examiner had detected radiation in and connected that to her mysterious illnesses that were cropping up. And she wanted answers. She wasn't going to stay quiet.
Ash
Yeah.
Alayna
Not just for herself, but she said, but for her friends who had become ill and sometimes died.
Ash
Yeah.
Alayna
Dr. Harrison Martland had confirmed that their illnesses had something to do with their jobs. But whether or not there was any negligence involved. Involved was something he couldn't prove by himself.
Ash
Right.
Alayna
Grace, on the other hand, had begun to suspect that her bosses at u. S. Radian had actually known a great deal more than they had let on and were going to great lengths to cover it up.
Ash
Oh, yeah.
Alayna
In fact, when she was first informed that she was sick, Grace recalled the day early in her job at the plant where von sashaki had explicitly told her not to put the brush in her mouth because it would make her sick.
Ash
Okay.
Alayna
So for however long, totally fine. Everything's great. Don't worry about it. Safe as can be. And then nothing. I'll do that to you. Stick it in there. It's fine. Ba ba ba. And then right as she gets sick, he's like, you shouldn't put that in your mouth.
Ash
It's like, huh? Why has it been fine up until this point, sir?
Alayna
And she said, if he knew there was danger in ingesting the radium dust and paint, why had he allowed it to happen for so long?
Ash
Right. Right.
Alayna
So a few months later, grace asked von sashake that very question. But aside from ashamedly muttering something about how he'd warned other members of the corporation of the risk, he offered no explanation.
Ash
Wow.
Alayna
So she literally was like, why did you let everybody do that if you've known that? And he was like, I tried to tell them money, I think.
Ash
But yeah.
Alayna
According to kate moore, von shoshake would later claim that he raised his concerns to the board of directors and management, but, quote, was opposed by members of the corporation who had charge of the personnel. Sure. So no matter what way you shake it out, assholes.
Ash
Either way, all the way around, a shitty company.
Alayna
For years, grace fryer had been suffering from mysterious illnesses with no cure and would certainly, honestly, most certainly die at a very young age because of them.
Ash
Absolutely.
Alayna
And now, after receiving confirmation that the illness was definitely a direct result not just of negligence, but of outright deceit and abuse on the part of her employer. She was fucking pissed. So over the course of the following year, she started talking with her friends and former co workers and was like, let's file a fucking lawsuit against this Motherfucking good. Because again, it's not just negligence, it's deceit and abuse. Like, they did this intentionally. The problem was, though, that it was unclear whether new jersey labor laws would cover their damage claims since they had begun so many years earlier.
Ash
Wow.
Alayna
Also, while there was some evidence to suggest the company knew about the risks, they would have to prove that in court, which wasn't going to be super easy. Yeah, that's tough. Regardless of the challenge that was ahead of them, Grace and the others pressed the fuck On. And after two years, they finally found a lawyer that was willing to take on the case. Nice. In May 1927, Grace Fryer filed a suit against US Radium, which she was joined with four other former painters. Edna Husman, Catherine Schaub, Quinta McDonald and Albina Laris. In their petition, Fryer and the other women asked for $125,000 in damages.
Ash
Which is like, nothing considering what they were going through.
Alayna
Exactly. But lawyers on behalf of US Radium argued that the statute of limitations had long expired on their claim, which was true, as the state's law was written.
Ash
It's like, dudes, you know what you did? You're a huge corporation with, I'm sure, millions of fucking dollars. Give these girls some money so that they can literally pay their medical bills.
Alayna
Yes. Literally. Now, undeterred, the now referred to in the press as this is when they got the name Radium Girls.
Ash
Okay?
Alayna
So the Radium Girls petitioned the New Jersey Supreme Court to expand the statute of limitation for workplace negligent claims, arguing, quote, the harmful effect of radioactive substances on workers may set in from one to 18 years after exposure to that substance.
Ash
Wow, it can take that long.
Alayna
So that's why that statue of limitations is. So, by the time the court date arrived in January 1928, two of the women had become bedridden. Oh. Grace was unable to walk and required a back brace in order to sit up. She was one of the ones whose, like, vertebrae had, like, basically disintegrated. And, quote, none could raise their arms to even take the oath. None of them. That's how sick they were. None of them could even raise an arm like this.
Ash
Oh, my God.
Alayna
Under the circumstances, the court date was pushed back to April, at which time a number of medical experts and scientists testified on behalf of Fryer and the others, explaining the effects of radiation on the body and how it had caused the specific illnesses in the five women who'd brought the suitcase. Despite all this, and despite the absolute urgency and the fact that two of them are now bedridden and none of them can even raise their hand to take the oath, like, their health is frail, is not even worth deteriorating. Lawyers for US Radium successfully petitioned to have the case postponed until September. You want to know why?
Ash
Because they were hoping these guys.
Alayna
Is everybody ready? Nope. You want. You all. I want everyone to hold on for this answer. They wanted to postpone this case to September because, quote, several US Radium witnesses are vacationing in Europe.
Ash
That checks.
Alayna
So this. These women are actively dying. Actively dying. And they want to move it further out so that these pieces of shit can finish vacation. Vacationing in Europe. We don't want. We don't want to mess up their vacations.
Ash
Who profited off all of the work that these girls did and are now suffering from? Wow.
Alayna
Wow, wow, wow.
Ash
I'm so mad right now. Oh, my God.
Alayna
What? By then, the case of the Radium Girls had received a lot of national coverage, and the judge's decision to postpone this case was met with public outrage.
Ash
Yeah, I mean, like, yeah, people were, no problem. I'll wait until you're done with your yacht.
Alayna
No problem.
Ash
Sounds good.
Alayna
Because people, the public, had started to see these women, the five women, as symbolic of the ways in which the working class were being exploited by corporations.
Ash
Yep. Not only that, but people are buying these products.
Alayna
So they're like, I don't see justice here.
Ash
Right.
Alayna
Given the interest in the story, Fryer and the others used the opportunity to plead their case to the public and granted interviews in which they told their story.
Ash
Good.
Alayna
Fryer told the reporter, I have had 19 operations, but my doctors tell me there is no hope.
Ash
Oh, my God.
Alayna
In each interview, Grace gave details about her illness and how the negligence and recklessness of US Radium had affected her life and was going to enter her life. She said, the worst part of the whole thing is that I don't dare do much with my hands for fear of being scratched. The least scratch will not heals because of the radium. So she can't even do anything because she's so worried about getting a tiny scratch, because then if that it won't ever heal.
Ash
She's done.
Alayna
By late May, three more former painters had joined the suit.
Ash
Good. Amazing.
Alayna
And we're now pushing to have the trial moved up, arguing that the plaintiffs might die before the case was called in September.
Ash
So sorry that you're busy on your European vacation, but I might not lie. Literal life depends on this.
Alayna
Just days later, Vice Chancellor John Backus ruled that the statute of limitations was not applicable in this case, and the suit should be allowed to move forward quickly. Good, he said. My own opinion is that the statute of limitations did not run from the time the girls took this poison into their systems, but from the time of the injury. And in my opinion, the statute of limitation does not apply until the period of an injury ends.
Ash
Great.
Alayna
Which, like hell, yeah. Backus opinion didn't end with his opinions on the statute alone. He also addressed the trial delay rather than continue waiting on the case, which would be likely held to previous Standards, Backus suggested. You know what, girlies? Why don't you drop this existing case? File a new one. File that new one. That's going to be held to the new shit.
Ash
Nice.
Alayna
So file another one. Drop this, like, get out of there. Among other things, a new case would have been aided significantly by the information that had come to light during the review of the statute of limitations, including the fact that managers at the US Radium Corporation had, quote, in setting up the plea of the statute of limitations, essentially confessed that they had been guilty of the wrongs of which the defendants claimed. Yeah, we're guilty.
Ash
It's just that times run out and
Alayna
now you can use this. Yeah. Because guess what, baby? That statute of limitations doesn't exist anymore. But your statements do.
Ash
Yup, still there. Still there.
Alayna
While the courts and lawyers for both sides fought in court, the victims continued their campaign to keep the story in the press. They wanted people to keep hearing about this. A few days after the limitations ruling was made, Catherine Schaub made a surprising offer to the doctors and scientists studying the effects of radium poisoning. Now, Grace Fryer, I'll tell you the author. Don't offer, don't worry. But Grace Fryer had previously offered. She had offered her body for study after her death. Wow. She had said, when I die, you can take it to study for radium poisoning. But as one doctor put it, that we examine her body after death would not do so much for medical science as a living specimen. Okay, they're like, that's great. Like, wonderful.
Ash
Thank you.
Alayna
Absolutely. But, like, it's not going to do what we need it to do, essentially. And given that Catherine Schaub offered herself as a living specimen, what? Telling reporters, I am willing with my fullest confidence in the doctors to undergo experiments that may save the other girls.
Ash
Wow. I just got chilled.
Alayna
I just got a whole chills. I'm. I have goosebumps all the way up.
Ash
My arms, my legs have goosebumps.
Alayna
Even Catherine Chop. Wow.
Ash
What an incredible, huge human, not even knowing what, like, what these experiments could do to her. But if they were going to save one of her friends or somebody who had gone through what she had.
Alayna
Exactly.
Ash
That's amazing.
Alayna
Now, between Bacchus's ruling in the statute case and the ongoing and very much intensifying public support of the victims, officials from US Radium saw that the wind was not blowing in their favor here. And the odds were definitely not in their favor.
Ash
The wind was not blowing through the sails of their European sailboats. No.
Alayna
With just days to go before the start of the new trial, lawyers for US Radium reached out to Grace and the other women with a settlement offer.
Ash
Yeah, how much?
Alayna
In exchange for dropping the lawsuit, they offered a $10,000 lump sum payment and $600 a year for the rest of their lives.
Ash
To that I would say, suck my dick.
Alayna
Now that, like, we just, you know. As Ash just said so eloquently, this settlement was hardly what had been asked for in the lawsuit. Yeah, but given that none of them were likely to live much longer, which is very upsetting, all five agreed it would be better to get some resolution than to die with no one being
Ash
held accountable and to spend like the rest of their lives fighting this.
Alayna
Unfortunately, completely understandable. By settling out of court, US Radium had no obligation to take responsibility for or even acknowledge their role in any.
Ash
Wow.
Alayna
In response to the settlement, US Radium's president, Clarence Lee, gave a statement to the press in which he said, we unfortunately gave work to a great many people who were physically unfit to procure employment in other lines of industry. Cripples and persons similarly incapacitated were engaged. What was then considered an act of kindness on our part has been turned against us.
Ash
Are you fucking joshing me, bro? Get.
Alayna
Be so for real, Clarence. Be so.
Ash
Clarence.
Alayna
Fucking for real.
Ash
You got. I just hit my microphone with anger. You gotta tell me that karma got
Alayna
one of these motherfuckers, Clarence. That statement sent me into fucking oblivion. Like, I don't.
Ash
We were nice enough to give you a job, and you're annoyed because your jaw's falling off because you're physically unfit to do it, are you?
Alayna
And it's like, joking.
Ash
I. Oh, boy.
Alayna
Karma's gonna get you now. By the mid-1930s, all five of the radium girls had died without hearing a single word of apology from the company, who'd taken literally everything from them.
Ash
Their lives.
Alayna
Not one fucking breath of an apology.
Ash
Why not one motherfucking. Otta.
Alayna
Yeah.
Ash
Are you joking?
Alayna
Not one breath of apology. That makes me so fucking angry.
Ash
I need to know when they got shut down. I need to know.
Alayna
Well, the settlement in the US Radium case turned out to be just the beginning. And other suits followed around the country.
Ash
Good.
Alayna
In Ottawa, Illinois, Catherine Donahue and several other former painters filed suit against the Radium Dial Company based in allegations very similar to the one in the New Jersey case. And by then, the girls, who were once known as local celebrities for their work with Radium Paint, had become known in the press as, quote, the Society of the Living Dead.
Ash
Oh, my God.
Alayna
And that was given to them, that moniker for their, like, deformities and illnesses. That's a quote.
Ash
Wow.
Alayna
Like Grace Friar and the painters from U. S. Radium, Donahue and the others in Illinois spent years looking for a lawyer to even take on the case before they finally found someone to represent them. Ultimately, the women won, but it was at what Kate Moore, who we again, we will cite in the. In the show notes called quote, great personal cost. At the time, Ottawa was a, you know, kind of like a. It's a company town is what it's called, which is a town built around a single company. And few people were reluctant to take on or even question radium dial because a lot of people still relied on them for their paycheck, for their livings. And Morris said the town didn't really want to acknowledge what had happened. And there's evidence I've seen in their letters that the radium girls that like the whistleblowers essentially that their neighbors, the clergy and business people kind of shunned them.
Ash
Wow.
Alayna
The clergy, their church shunned them because they spoke up about, like dying from radium pain.
Ash
That is so ass backwards.
Alayna
Like, what the.
Ash
Isn't there a whole bit in the bible about community and like love thy
Alayna
neighbor to me, like, that they could turn on them.
Ash
Love thy corporation. It's love thy neighbor.
Alayna
Exactly. I think. And even though they won their cases, the awards were relatively small in the end, with the company paying out $10,000 in total to the victims, which is
Ash
probably a nickel as far as the average nothing.
Alayna
For the victims of the radium extraction plants around the country, the legal and financial victories were definitely small, and most died truly agonizing deaths in the few years that followed. But still, the truth about radium and the abuses of companies like US Radium and radium dial had gotten out. They had. They had gotten people to hear these things. And without them, nobody would have known. In Illinois, Congress passed the occupational disease act as a direct result of Donahue and the others taking their story to the public. And New Jersey occupational safety standards were changed as a result of the radium girls. It was all because of them, including a provision requiring all radium dial painters to be provided with complete protective gear. And in 1949, Congress passed a bill making occupational disease, like those experienced by the dial painters something able to be compensated for and considerably extended the federal statute of limitations. Employees had to file a claim. Good. All because of them.
Ash
Wow.
Alayna
Despite all that, the country had come to learn about radium in the 1920s. And 30s, radium paint was still used in manufacturing as late as 1970. 60s shut the up, albeit with far more safety precautions in place. But still still. According to the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, the number of people harmed or killed by radium paint is unknown. But quote, it is estimated that over several decades, approximately 4,000 women around the country worked as dial painters. Now, to this day, places like Orange, New Jersey and Ottawa, Illinois, struggle with the legacy of radium extension extraction plants like US Radium and radium dial. Decades later, large sections of land on which the factories were sitting.
Ash
Oh, I didn't even think of that.
Alayna
They've been deemed Superfund sites, which is a place where hazardous materials were carelessly produced or stored or dumped.
Ash
I didn't even think of that. Wow.
Alayna
I didn't either. And in many cases, the toxins that were produced on Superfund sites seep into the groundwater and spread and contaminate other natural resources, which put residents at risk. Risk for cancer, other maladies. Who knows?
Ash
Somebody get Aaron Brockovich up in here.
Alayna
That's all I could think of.
Ash
Oh, my God.
Alayna
That's all I could think of.
Ash
I love that movie.
Alayna
I do, too. For decades following their deaths, the story of the Radium Girls has found its way back to the public eye many times over through, like, books, plays, other cultural productions. But unfortunately, the companies responsible for those deaths were never truly held accountable. And the contributions of the women themselves has vastly gone. Overlooked. Yeah, in the long run, like if you really look at it. But finally, in the summer of 2021. You're joking. Yeah. Senators in New Jersey, Connecticut and Illinois put forth a bill to formally recognize the lives and sacrifices made by these women. Good New Jersey Senator Bob Menendez told the press a century after the first Radium Girls started working in factories in New Jersey, Connecticut and Illinois. We stand today to recognize their plight and the contributions of these courageous women to modern workplace standard safety standards. And Senator Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut echoed that sentiment. He said, this resolution honors the Radium Girls determined, relentless fight for justice throughout the 20th century. After being deceived and misled about the risks to their health and safety, hundreds of workers suffered mysterious health complications and even died. The Radium Girls effort to hold corporations accountable for their callous, uncaring treatment of their employees paved the way for future workplace safety standards, saving the lives of countless others. We honor their memory by continuing to fight for the safety and rights of workers everywhere.
Ash
That's incredible.
Alayna
And that is the story of the Radium Girls.
Ash
It's Just so crazy that this is. Like, I had heard of this before, but only from you. I'm pretty sure. Like, that's something we should learn about in school.
Alayna
Absolutely. Like, I didn't learn about them in school.
Ash
No. And I feel like we should.
Alayna
Yeah.
Ash
That would make chemistry a whole lot more interesting, let me tell you.
Alayna
That's what I'm saying. Wow.
Ash
And just, like, the. The sacrifice that they made, it's.
Alayna
It's an unbelievable story. Like, it is, because you just can't believe it was like, the. The book that I referenced many times by Kate Moore is called the Radium Girls. It's a phenomenal book. I highly suggest it. Go get it. Like, it's really, really fascinating. Yeah. I think we have it up here actually, somewhere. It's a phenomenal book. It's so sad. Fascinating.
Ash
There's a movie.
Alayna
Infuriating. Yeah, There is a Radium Girls movie. I want to watch it now. Yeah. I'm telling you, the story is just the further you get into it, the more it will anger you. It will make you sad. It'll make you, like, inspired by these women. Like, it's. It's got everything. It's all the pieces, seriously. And the fact that these girls were like, fuck, no. Like, Grace, you're not gonna get away with this. Catherine Schaub is like, no. Like Donahue. Like, they're all just like, nope, you're not getting away with this. And even if we die because of it, we're gonna make sure that you can't do this to somebody else.
Ash
Good for them.
Alayna
Like, badasses. Wow.
Ash
What a horrifying tale.
Alayna
Truly horrifying. That's why I said, I know this is like a different. It's a.
Ash
It's still true crime. Yeah.
Alayna
Crime for sure. It's just a different kind.
Ash
I. I like when we do, like. Obviously, I like all the stuff that we do, but I love the Dark History ones. I just.
Alayna
They're Dark History is my favorite. And there's so much thing to read about.
Ash
Yeah. And there's so much that has happened in this world that you don't.
Alayna
Yeah.
Ash
Like, that we don't know about or you don't learn in school that. My God, I would have done better in school.
Alayna
Yeah.
Ash
I'm like, oh, okay. I'll apply myself to this.
Alayna
Like, this is fascinating and horrifying all at once.
Ash
But.
Alayna
Yeah. And I think I want to say, the last Radium Girl, when I was reading about it, she died, at which I was shocked by, like, one of the ones who was like, in the factories was like 104.
Ash
Whoa. Yeah.
Alayna
She lived like very long. Which effects. I'm not sure about her. It was back in, like, I want to say, like 2014 or.
Ash
It's crazy that, like, some people had effects and some didn't. And then knowing that you worked in a. In a plant like that, and then watching women that you worked with and then you're just sitting there, I'm sure wondering, when is this gonna happen to me? Yeah, like, when is my tooth gonna fall out? And then it. The rest is just done.
Alayna
Like, I. I just saw. I on Tick tock. I saw Bunny there. We love Bunny, which also.
Ash
She shouted us out on her TikTok and I shot myself, essentially.
Alayna
She was talking about how she.
Ash
She.
Alayna
They found like a small aneurysm in her carotid artery, but she's not and
Ash
they don't think it is.
Alayna
But she described it and perfectly how I think these girls must have felt. She. She described it as walking around with a grenade in her head. Yeah, and that's exactly. I like that hit for me, when I. Because I was reading this at the same time and I was like, these girls must have walked around seeing what's happening, like you said to all their co workers and friends, and feeling like they're walking around with a grenade inside of them.
Ash
Y.
Alayna
That's just going to. When is it going to explode?
Ash
Yep.
Alayna
When is it going to happen?
Ash
No, that's. Oh, my God.
Alayna
Any kind of minor tooth pain. You're probably like, oh, my God, like this is happening or anything.
Ash
You know, like when you. When you hear about something and you're like, do I feel that?
Alayna
Yes.
Ash
Like, like phantom pain.
Alayna
You'll hear about, like, an aneurysm or you hear about like, a brain tumor, and all of a sudden you get a small headache or something and you're like, oh, my God. Is this.
Ash
Yeah. Wow.
Alayna
It's a while.
Ash
What a trail. Elena. Jesus.
Alayna
Thank you.
Ash
Wow.
Alayna
Yeah.
Ash
Well, we hope you keep listening and
Alayna
we hope you keep it weird, but
Ash
also weird that you employ a bunch of girls and tell them, yeah, it's totally fine to eat radium and nothing will happen to you. And then you know full well that that actually is going to do something to them and you say, oh, I'm so sorry. I will totally appear in the court case, but I just have to go on my yacht first. Suck a dick.
Alayna
Truly.
Ash
Bye.
Alayna
Said eloquently by.
Ash
Sa.
Alayna
Foreign. Is this summer's horror discovery of immense power that critics are hailing as haunting and heartbreaking.
Ash
You see anything that looks like me, don't go near it.
Alayna
When a curse is inflicted on two teenage boys, they must escape a violent entity that takes the form of the person they desire most.
Ash
Each other.
Alayna
Critics are raving that it is a bone chilling horror that's biblically scary.
Ash
It's gonna kill him.
Alayna
Leviticus. Rated R. In theaters Friday.
Ash
Sometimes life will get you stressed out. Lucky you can always count on text now. Free Talk.
Alayna
Free text.
Ash
Free 5G and they'll never shut you off.
Alayna
Cause like I said, it's free.
Ash
Text now's got your back nationwide. No long term contracts but all they nervous about me. TextNow's got your back. That's their sense of purpose. No matter what comes next, you've got free talk and text with the TextNow app.
Alayna
Wireless plans require the purchase of a sim card. Visit textnow.com for terms and conditions.
Hosts: Ash Kelley & Alaina Urquhart
Release Date: June 18, 2026
In this episode, Ash and Alaina take listeners on a deeply researched and darkly humorous journey into the history of the Radium Girls—a group of early 20th-century factory workers whose exposure to radioactive paint led to horrific illnesses, landmark court cases, and major changes to workplace safety laws. The hosts blend their signature banter and empathy while delving into corporate greed, scientific misunderstanding, and the courage of women who fought back against impossible odds.
This episode is a harrowing yet inspiring look at one of the most shocking cases of industrial neglect and its wider legacy. Ash and Alaina remind listeners of the power of resistance, the cost of progress, and the importance of questioning authority—even when something sparkles.
Recommended resources:
For listeners interested in the intersection of corporate crime, medical history, and feminist resilience, this episode is a must-listen.