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Gerald Markowitz

👤 Speaker
41 total appearances

Appearances Over Time

Podcast Appearances

WSJ What’s News
The Struggle to Keep America’s Workers Safe

In the early 20th century, there was really a massive, I think using the word slaughter is not too strong, of workers.

WSJ What’s News
The Struggle to Keep America’s Workers Safe

In the first couple of decades of the 20th century, there's an estimate that 35,000 workers died every year on the job.

WSJ What’s News
The Struggle to Keep America’s Workers Safe

Two million suffered injuries.

WSJ What’s News
The Struggle to Keep America’s Workers Safe

So that's the context for the Triangle Fire.

WSJ What’s News
The Struggle to Keep America’s Workers Safe

But it was, in a sense, the tip of the iceberg of what was happening to workers in a wide variety of industries.

WSJ What’s News
The Struggle to Keep America’s Workers Safe

Steel, railroads, mining, iron, meatpacking.

WSJ What’s News
The Struggle to Keep America’s Workers Safe

If I had to point to a time when

WSJ What’s News
The Struggle to Keep America’s Workers Safe

The awareness of chronic disease in the national consciousness really developed, it would be during the 1930s, in part because so many workers were identified, finally, as suffering from silicosis, and they had nowhere to turn.

WSJ What’s News
The Struggle to Keep America’s Workers Safe

In the 1930s, hundreds of men were hired to dig the Gawley Bridge Tunnel in West Virginia.

WSJ What’s News
The Struggle to Keep America’s Workers Safe

476 men died here from silicosis.

WSJ What’s News
The Struggle to Keep America’s Workers Safe

I was there digging that tunnel for six

WSJ What’s News
The Struggle to Keep America’s Workers Safe

It was both a news story as well as a congressional investigation and really put occupational disease on the political map.

WSJ What’s News
The Struggle to Keep America’s Workers Safe

put silicosis on the political map.

WSJ What’s News
The Struggle to Keep America’s Workers Safe

1935, a wave of fear was sweeping the country.

WSJ What’s News
The Struggle to Keep America’s Workers Safe

Silicosis was taking its toll from the ranks of American workers.

WSJ What’s News
The Struggle to Keep America’s Workers Safe

Cause of the disease, dust.

WSJ What’s News
The Struggle to Keep America’s Workers Safe

Results of the disease, disablement, poverty, death.

WSJ What’s News
The Struggle to Keep America’s Workers Safe

Cure for the disease, none.

WSJ What’s News
The Struggle to Keep America’s Workers Safe

After years of exposure to silica, once strong and healthy, John Steele is now weak and emaciated.

WSJ What’s News
The Struggle to Keep America’s Workers Safe

And this led to congressional hearings in the 1930s.

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