Radium Dial Company

Radium Dial Company
IndustryRadium paint, radioactive materials[which?]
Founded1917; 107 years ago (1917)
FateDissolved[when?]
Headquarters,
Key people
Joseph A. Kelly Sr.
Number of employees
1000+ (1925)
ParentStandard Chemical Company

The Radium Dial Company was one of a few now defunct United States companies, along with the United States Radium Corporation, involved in the painting of clocks, watches and other instrument dials using radioluminescent paint containing radium. The resulting dials are now collectively known as radium dials. The luminous paint used on the dials contained a mixture of zinc sulfide activated with silver, and powdered radium, a product that the Radium Dial Company named Luma. However, unlike the US Radium Corporation, Radium Dial Company was specifically set up to only paint dials, and no other radium processing took place at the premises.

The company is notable for being involved in the radium poisoning of the Radium Girls. The workers in the factories were told that the radium paint was harmless. Radium's negative health effects were well-known at the time, however it was thought that small amounts of radium were not dangerous and even a cure for lack of energy.[1] The workers in the factories consumed deadly amounts of radium due to being told by management to "point" their brushes on their lips for a fine tip.[2] The young workers also used the radium paints to adorn their fingernails, lips and teeth to make them glow. This led to significant health problems and deaths among the company's workforce. The workers eventually sued Radium Dial Company and received financial compensation for their health problems, though the Radium Dial Company continuously appealed so this process took years and many workers had already died of their injuries.[3] This litigation led to significant reforms in workplace safety and eventually led to the establishment of OSHA decades later.

  1. ^ Prisco, Jacopo (2017-12-19). "Radium Girls: The dark times of luminous watches". CNN. Retrieved 2024-05-28.
  2. ^ "Radium Girls". National Museum of American History. 2020-09-10. Retrieved 2021-06-18.
  3. ^ DeVille, Kenneth A.; Steiner, Mark E. (Spring 1997). "The New Jersey Radium Dial Workers and the Dynamics of Occupational Disease Litigation in the Early Twentieth Century". Missouri Law Review. 62 (2): 1–35. Retrieved 2024-05-28.