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Crime Salad steps into Weird History, traveling back to the early 1900s, when a glowing new element promised progress, beauty, and modern life.
In this episode of Weird History by Crime Salad, we explore the rise of radium mania, from the young women who became known as the Radium Girls, to the powerful corporations that insisted radium was safe while workers grew sick and died.
We touch on crumbling jaws, altered death certificates, and why early causes of death were quietly labeled as syphilis instead of radium poisoning. Names like Grace Fryer and Mollie Maggia emerge as whispers of a much larger truth.
But the danger was not limited to factories.
While workers were suffering, wealthy Americans were drinking radium by choice. Products like Radithor promised vitality and youth, until cases like Eben Byers forced the country to pay attention.
From glowing watches and military dials made with Undark, to radium water crocks, cosmetics, alarm clocks, toys, and other everyday items, radioactive products found their way into homes across America.
This episode looks at what happens when science, profit, and blind trust collide, and how the voices of the Radium Girls ultimately changed workplace safety and radiation laws forever.
Sometimes the most dangerous things are the ones that glow.
Radium Girls
Radium poisoning
Syphilis death certificates
U.S. Radium
Undark paint
Radithor
Eben Byers
Revigator
Radium cosmetics
Radioactive consumer products
Workplace safety history
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
By BLACKCAT | Realm4.4
31523,152 ratings
Crime Salad steps into Weird History, traveling back to the early 1900s, when a glowing new element promised progress, beauty, and modern life.
In this episode of Weird History by Crime Salad, we explore the rise of radium mania, from the young women who became known as the Radium Girls, to the powerful corporations that insisted radium was safe while workers grew sick and died.
We touch on crumbling jaws, altered death certificates, and why early causes of death were quietly labeled as syphilis instead of radium poisoning. Names like Grace Fryer and Mollie Maggia emerge as whispers of a much larger truth.
But the danger was not limited to factories.
While workers were suffering, wealthy Americans were drinking radium by choice. Products like Radithor promised vitality and youth, until cases like Eben Byers forced the country to pay attention.
From glowing watches and military dials made with Undark, to radium water crocks, cosmetics, alarm clocks, toys, and other everyday items, radioactive products found their way into homes across America.
This episode looks at what happens when science, profit, and blind trust collide, and how the voices of the Radium Girls ultimately changed workplace safety and radiation laws forever.
Sometimes the most dangerous things are the ones that glow.
Radium Girls
Radium poisoning
Syphilis death certificates
U.S. Radium
Undark paint
Radithor
Eben Byers
Revigator
Radium cosmetics
Radioactive consumer products
Workplace safety history
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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