Pale skin. Brittle hands. Cataracts that glowed a sombre ember. Fragile teeth breaking away chip by chip. Necrosis of the jaw as the bones and flesh began to rot.
These were the terrifying symptoms of a mystery illness that swept the US in the 1920s. Years later, we now know how and why these people suffered.
They were slowly poisoned by their employers.
They were the Radium Girls, and this is their story.
At the beginning of the 1920s, radium dial factories became popular across the US, in particular, in the states of New Jersey, Illinois and Connecticut. It was at these seemingly innocuous factories where a hellish fate awaited innocent workers who tirelessly painted watch dials, clocks and various other wartime instruments with lethal radium paint.
Radium was first discovered in 1898 by Marie and Pierre Curie and was used to treat cancer after it was discovered that radiation could kill living cells. It quickly became a cure for various other things, including hearing loss, chronic otitis in children and acne. In 1918, it even became a hit in the beauty industry, with companies selling radium as a way for women to keep their skin 'radiating' with youthfulness.
It then became a popular material used to make devices glow in the dark - a particularly helpful tool during the war.
Working in these radium factories was a lucrative job for young women. Wages were higher than the average factory job and so word quickly spread, attracting new employees every week.