Wired | Author’s note: Most people don’t realize that we knew in the
1920s that leaded gasoline was extremely dangerous. And in light of a Mother Jones
story this week that looks at the connection between leaded gasoline
and crime rates in the United States, I thought it might be worth
reviewing that history. The following is an updated version of an
earlier post based on information from my book about early 10th century
toxicology, The Poisoner’s Handbook.
In the fall of 1924, five bodies from New Jersey were delivered to
the New York City Medical Examiner’s Office. You might not expect those
out-of-state corpses to cause the chief medical examiner to worry about
the dirt blowing in Manhattan streets. But they did.
To understand why you need to know the story of those five dead men,
or at least the story of their exposure to a then mysterious industrial
poison.
The five men worked at the Standard Oil Refinery in
Bayway, New Jersey. All of them spent their days in what plant
employees nicknamed “the loony gas building”, a tidy brick structure
where workers seemed to sicken as they handled a new gasoline additive.
The additive’s technical name was tetraethyl lead
or, in industrial shorthand, TEL. It was developed by researchers at
General Motors as an anti-knock formula, with the assurance that it was
entirely safe to handle.
But, as I wrote in a previous post,
men working at the plant quickly gave it the “loony gas” tag because
anyone who spent much time handling the additive showed stunning signs
of mental deterioration, from memory loss to a stumbling loss of
coordination to sudden twitchy bursts of rage. And then in October of
1924, workers in the TEL building began collapsing, going into
convulsions, babbling deliriously. By the end of September, 32 of the 49
TEL workers were in the hospital; five of them were dead.
The problem, at that point, was that no one knew exactly why. Oh,
they knew – or should have known – that tetraethyl lead was dangerous.
As Charles Norris, chief medical examiner for New York City pointed out,
the compound had been banned in Europe for years due to its toxic
nature. But while U.S. corporations hurried TEL into production in the
1920s, they did not hurry to understand its medical or environmental
effects.
In 1922, the U.S. Public Health Service had asked Thomas Midgley, Jr. – the developer of the leaded gasoline process – for copies of all his research into the health consequences of tetraethyl lead (TEL).
Midgley, a scientist at General Motors, replied that no such research
existed. And two years later, even with bodies starting to pile up, he
had still not looked into the question. Although GM and Standard Oil
had formed a joint company to manufacture leaded gasoline – the Ethyl Gasoline Corporation -
its research had focused solely on improving the TEL formulas. The
companies disliked and frankly avoided the lead issue. They’d
deliberately left the word out of their new company name to avoid its
negative image.
In response to the worker health crisis at the Bayway plant, Standard
Oil suggested that the problem might simply be overwork. Unimpressed,
the state of New Jersey ordered a halt to TEL production. And because
the compound was so poorly understood, state health officials asked the
New York City Medical Examiner’s Office to find out what had happened. Fist tap Dale.
3 comments:
What a misbegotten legacy. Thomas Midgley, Jr: Inventor of TEL _and_ Freon.
I don't know, man... What about Fritz Haber?
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