The Radium Dial's new attorney. Trudel: Grossman: Leonard's wife. Charles: Hackensmith: Peg's husband. Aka: Chuck. Dr. Alice: Hamilton: The founder of industrial toxicology. Katherine's ally. Dela: Harveston: A dial painter at Radium Dial who died of tuberculosis. Raymond : Herst-Berry: A lawyer who runs the Potter & Berry firm. Frederick: Hoffman
Radium Lawyer: Steven Hauck ... Dr. Marland: Carol Cadby ... Mrs. Butkiss: Gina Piersanti ... Hazel: Juliana Sass ... Agnes: Neil Akins ... Judge: Gemma Josephine ... Reporter Radclyffe (as …
The radium industry tried to discredit Martland's findings, but the Radium Girls themselves fought back. Many knew that their days were numbered, but they wanted to do something to help their colleagues still working with the deadly substance. In 1927 attorney Raymond Berry agreed to accept their case.
U.S. Radium settles In 1928, U.S. Radium settled the lawsuit, giving each of the women $10,000 plus $600 a year for as long as they continued to suffer from radium poisoning. The case became known as "The Case of the Five Women Doomed to Die."Aug 8, 2019
The Radium Girls plight is documented by Oklahoma journalist Etta (Susan Heyward), an activist whose family's photography store was destroyed during the Tulsa Race Massacre in 1921.Nov 5, 2020
Set in 1925, the movie stars Joey King and Abby Quinn as Bessie and Jo Cavallo, composite characters inspired in part by three real-life sisters who worked in the dial-painting factory in Orange, New Jersey: Quinta Maggia McDonald, Albina Maggia Larice and Amelia “Mollie” Maggia, who was the first dial-painter to die ...Oct 22, 2020
In the early 1920s, workers at U.S. Radium Corporation's luminous watch dial factory were mysteriously falling ill and dying. Eager to halt a mounting scandal, company President Arthur Roeder contacted industrial hygiene expert Cecil Drinker to investigate.
The factory manufactured glow-in-the-dark watch dials that used radium to make them luminous. The women would dip their brushes into radium, lick the tip of the brushes to give them a precise point, and paint the numbers onto the dial. That direct contact and exposure led to many women dying from radium poisoning.Nov 11, 2020
Joey King, who plays Bessie Cavallo. Amelia “Mollie” Maggia, who worked at a factory in Orange, was the first dial-painter to die on September 12, 1922, according to theradiumgirls.com. Despite battling tooth loss and jaw-bone decay, syphilis was ruled the cause of her death.Oct 28, 2020
The United States Radium Corporation was a company, most notorious for its operations between the years 1917 to 1926 in Orange, New Jersey, in the United States that led to stronger worker protection laws.
Both girls work as dial painters at American Radium (re-named from the actual United States Radium Corporation). Josephine wins awards for being the most productive, while Bessie gets scolded and has her pay docked due to shoddy work. See, Bessie refuses to lick the brush to create the fine tip needed for precise work.Oct 24, 2020
Joey King and Abby Quinn beautifully play sisters Bessie and Josephine Cavallo (apparently based on the real life sisters Quinta McDonald and Albina Larice).Mar 23, 2020
Still, the girls are committed to each other—with a shared interest in spiritualism and Egyptomania, captured by their constant consultation of “The Book of the Dead”—and when Josephine falls mysteriously ill, Bessie vows to take care of her.Oct 23, 2020
Initially, the women did not know the risks of radium and even enjoyed painting it onto their nails and clothing to glow in the dark, but exposure to radium later led to over 30 deaths in the company. Frances Splettstocher, a woman in her early twenties, was the first to die in the Waterbury Radium Girls tragedy.
In New Jersey, the story of the abuse perpetrated against the workers is distinguished from most such cases by the fact that the ensuing litigation was covered widely by the media. Plant worker Grace Fryer decided to sue, but it took two years for her to find a lawyer willing to take on U.S. Radium. Even after the women found a lawyer, the litigation process moved slowly. At their first a…
From 1917 to 1926, U.S. Radium Corporation, originally called the Radium Luminous Material Corporation, was engaged in the extraction and purification of radium from carnotite ore to produce luminous paints, which were marketed under the brand name "Undark". The ore was mined from the Paradox Valley in Colorado and other "Undark mines" in Utah. As a defense contractor, U.S. Radium was a major supplier of radioluminescentwatches to the military. Their plant in Orange, …
The Radium Dial Company was established in Ottawa, Illinois, in 1922, in the town's former high school. Like the United States Radium Corporation, the purpose of the studio in Ottawa was to paint dials for clocks, their largest client being Westclox Corporation in Peru, Illinois. Dials painted in Ottawa appeared on Westclox's popular Big Ben, Baby Ben and travel clocks; and like United States Radium Corporation, Radium Dial hired young women to paint the dials, using the same "li…
• Breaker boy
• Katherine Rotan Drinker and Cecil Kent Drinker, who researched the Radium Girls
• Hiroshima maidens
• Labor law
• Rutgers University – 'University Libraries Special Collections: U.S. Radium Corporation, East Orange, NJ', Records, Catalog 1917–1940
• Undark and the Radium Girls, Alan Bellows, December 28, 2006, Damn Interesting
• Radium Girls, Eleanor Swanson. copy of original