Radium was discovered by
Marie and
Pierre Curie in 1898 and was soon combined with paint to make
luminescent paint, which was applied to clocks, airplane instruments, and the like, to be able to read them in the dark. In 1914, Dr. Sabin Arnold von Sochocky and Dr. George S. Willis founded the Radium Luminous Material Corporation. The company made luminescent paint. The company later changed its name to the
United States Radium Corporation.The use of radium to provide luminescence for hands and indices on watches soon followed. The
Ingersoll Watch division of the
Waterbury Clock Company, a nationally-known maker of low-cost pocket and wristwatches, was a leading popularizer of the use of radium for watch hands and indices through the introduction of their "Radiolite" watches in 1916. The Radiolite series, made in various sizes and models, became a signature of the Connecticut-based company. Radium dials were typically painted by young women, who used to 'point' their brushes by licking and shaping the bristles prior to painting the fine lines and numbers on the dials. This practice resulted in the ingestion of radium, which caused serious jaw-bone degeneration and malignancy and other dental diseases. The disease,
radium-induced osteonecrosis, was recognized as an
occupational disease in 1925 after a group of radium painters, known as the
Radium Girls, from the
United States Radium Corporation sued. By 1930, all dial painters stopped pointing their brushes by mouth. Stopping this practice drastically reduced the amount of radium ingested and therefore, the incidence of malignancy. Luminous Processes employees interviewed by a journalist in 1978 stated they had been left ignorant of radium's dangers. They were told that eliminating lip-pointing had ended earlier problems. They worked in unvented rooms, they wore smocks that they laundered at home.
Geiger counters could pick up readings from pants returned from a dry cleaner and from clothes stored away in a cedar chest." ==Safety==