FB 108: Matchmakers: How a Dangerous Discovery Ignited the Labor Movement - podcast episode cover

FB 108: Matchmakers: How a Dangerous Discovery Ignited the Labor Movement

Jun 17, 202031 minSeason 1Ep. 8
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The discovery of one of the most hazardous elements on earth helped spark the greatest underdog story in the history of human labor relations.

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We all need a break from the constant cycle to learn something new, to gain new perspectives. The Great Courses Plus streaming service is an excellent resource to expand our knowledge on a variety of subjects or pick up a new hobby. I've been enjoying the Great Courses Plus while researching this season of flashback lectures like Playball, the rise of Baseball is America's pastime, History of the Supreme Court, and Battlefield Europe have helped me connect the dots on

several stories from history. Right now, they're giving our listeners a special limited time offer a free month of unlimited access to their entire library. Sign up now through our special U r L go to the Great Courses Plus dot com slash Aussie. That's the Great Courses Plus dot com slash o z Y the Great Courses Plus dot Com slash Assy. Nobody knows for sure how many buckets of urine Hinnig Brandt kept in his basement. By some accounts,

the seventeenth century German chemist had more than fifty. He used to collect the urine from his neighbors. Why well, Brandt, like a lot of great minds of his day, was in pursuit of the elusive Philosopher's Stone, the legendary substance capable of turning base metals into gold and ambitious scientists into very rich men. Maybe it was the color. It certainly wasn't the smell, but Hinnick Brandt was convinced that

by distilling human urine he could somehow create gold. He was wrong, of course, but in a vial of boiled urine he discovered something else in sixteen sixty nine. It wasn't the Philosopher's Stone, but it was an element that would prove just as valuable and destructive phosphorus. Welcome to Flashback, a podcast from Azzie. I'm Sean Braswell. Today, our tale of Unintended Consequences centers on what would become known as the devil's element, phosphorus. The compound that Henni brand unleashed

would change history in some unexpected ways. It would kill tens of thousands of innocent civilians and also helped feed an entire planet. And phosphorus was also the spark that lit perhaps the greatest underdog story in the history of human labor relations. Phosphorus is the most important element on the planet. This is kenn Ashley the director of the River's Institute at the British Columbia Institute of Technology and a global expert on phosphorus. It's really what sustains all

life on the planet. It's both inside is in our DNA and we needed to having food to lived, and so it really is the essence of life on Earth. But like so many good things, phosphorus has a dark side, and for a while it was that dark side that dominated the balance of its force on the planet. Let's go back to hitting Brandt are urine boiling seventeenth century German chemists for a moment. In his laboratory in Hamburg, Germany,

Brandt tried to make magic and his own fortune. What Henting brand did, and you certainly wouldn't want to have a neighbor doing this, is that he would take gallons and gallons of urine that he collected from around his local neighborhood, and he boiled it, and he drove off all the moisture, and then he'd keep heating it and heating it. After months of experimenting with stagnant urine, Brandt was eventually rewarded with a newly created substance that glowed

with an eerie green light. And because phosphorus blows in the dark, you can imagine from an alchemist in the in the Middle Ages there, if you found something that glowed in the dark, you thought you were pretty close to the magic, magic sort of compound. Then that could transmutate let into gold. But of course that's not what

Brandt had found. White phosphorus was what ning Brand had found, and uh, and it's not naturally found in nature because it's spontaneously combust brand streams of gold and wealth did not pan out with white phosphorus. I think Brand seems to have had a tough life. He you know, he discovered it, and then he people found out that he had it, and they wanted to figure out how to make it too. Of course, he wanted to keep it secret because then that would mean he would get more

attention and he'd be able to earn an income. And as is so often the case, the fame and the money when not to the first inventor but to the first salesman. A fellow German alchemist named Daniel Kraft stole Brand's thunder and became phosphorus is first showman. Craft ended up doing better with it because then he claimed that he had discovered and he was going around to various courts with nobility and showing it at night and sort of bringing in in the dark room and pulling the

cover off and showing the glow in the dark. Still no one knew quite what to do with phosphorus. It did not turn anything into gold. You could only entertain the European aristocracy so long with glow in the dark urine. Eventually, phosphorus was extracted from animal bones and later from mining phosphate rocks, but it really wasn't until the nineteenth century

that phosphorus truly came into its own. That was an eighty seven when an English chemist named John Walker invented what was called the lucifer, or what we refer to today as the match. The tiny splints of wood with white phosphorus tips soon became a transformative invention. Matches were absolutely essential before electricity. You didn't have hot water, you didn't have lighting, you didn't have hot food unless you had matches. This is Louise Raw, historian and author of

Striking a Light. The Bryanton may match women and their place in history. Most Victorian homes were lit by candles or gas lights and heated by coal. Fires and matches were a huge step forward from previous methods of starting a fire, and we see them from the eighteen fists

onwards being sold absolutely everywhere. Everywhere that people would gather, everywhere that smoke us would gather, there'd being perhaps a child, usually a little boy or a girl with a tray or a basket of matches, eagerly selling them to people. But the ones really making the money off the groundbreaking product were the match manufacturers. And the leading matchmaker in the UK was a company started by two quaker grocers,

William Bryant and Francis May. Brian and May made in sort a variety of goods, and they quickly realized that producing matches was something that could be done very cheaply. So in eighteen sixty one they came to bow in East London, very very poor East London was then, and set up what they called the fair Field Works, this match production site, and very quickly starts to make lots of money. The two men quickly went from being Quaker

grocers to Victorian industrial royalty. They became incredibly rich, multimillionaires really the equivalent so of even possibly billionaires, enormous country states entertaining the great and goods. Bryant and May's newfound wealth did not trickle down to their workforce. But in the heart of London's impoverished East End, a chemical reaction of sorts was brewing. The potent mixture of stark inequality and the hazardous effects of white phosphorus was about to

result in the salvation of millions of future workers. The catalyst for this remarkable reaction hundreds of brave, mostly teenage girls, willing to take a stand like none that the industrial world had ever seen. That's next. Do you have an interesting tale about unintended consequences from history or your own life, Please share it with us by emailing flashback at ausi dot com. That's flashback at oz y dot com. History

can feel like a moving target. Sometimes it can be hard to pin down what happened decades ago, much less centuries. Often the stories we do pin down and tell for generations are not the whole story, And to get that story you have to go beyond the scholars who work in the ivory towers. Luise raw Again, I called myself

an accidental historian. I kind of fell into historian ng By accident, I got very involved in the trade union movement, and then it was through that that I got a chance to learn what we call labor history, which is, you know, the history of working people, so it's not your kings and queens necessarily, it's ordinary working people. As part of her job, Raw was given the chance to take a history course. One day she was given an assignment.

It my mom thinking, oh my god, an essay. You know, I hadn't done anything like that since I was at school, and I sweated blood over that first esset. Raw decided to write about the only women covered in the course, the so called match girls. The best Match Girls strike was considered to be a colorful footnote in British labor history, a curiosity that occurred right before the strike of male doc workers in London that most scholars think was the

true landmark event. In the course, you could in those days learn the history of working people and just think that women weren't involved at all, which I've subsequently found out isn't true, but it was very much told as a story of working men. Rock wouldn't find a whole lot of material on the match women to write her essay. So she went digging and the company Branon May, the match making company, had ceased to exist in the UK in night, and they've given all their records to this

little local library. So literally, down in the basement of this library were the Brighton May records. Were they kind of, you know, just brought to me and dumped in front of me all these huge boxes. Raw set to work and really quickly discovered, to my surprise, that the story I'd been told really wasn't the way things happened, and it was actually a much more interesting and far more important story one traditional historians had not done justice. Raw

wrote her essay and later a critically acclaimed book. Here I was, this trade unionist and not particularly well educated, did not expect to be inadvertently kind of challenging the great historians who had written about this, But there you go. That's that's how it turned out. The story Louise Raw uncovered in the basement of the local library was an epic Dickinsian tale of perseverance and courage in the face of a corporate giant's appalling treatment of some of its

most vulnerable workers. Mostly they were women and girls, and they were really famous in the area. The match girls, they were treated badly and they were very much looked down on as well. They were as I discovered, something like a really cool girl gang. They really looked after each other. They knew that the one thing they had was strength in numbers, so they really supported one another.

Which it's just as well because the employers didn't. You could tell how poorly the women were paid just by looking at them. They were extremely small and pale and frail looking, and even for East End working class women who were not you know, through no fault of their own, were not the healthiest of people. Some of the workers were girls as young as nine. They were working twelve hour days from six in the morning to six at night, standing up the whole time. Most most of the work

was done standing up, so it's really exhausting. Um. What made matters worse is that Brian's may find them as well, which was actually illegal under the Factory Acts at the time. But they find them for the slightest infraction. Really, if the girls were laughing, or if they were talking or just generally mucking about a bit, as teenage girls will, then the foreman would find them. But the workers situation was even worse than that, something that a crusading activist

and journalists named Annie Besson soon discovered. Annie Besson was a socialist of a kind. She was for women's right. Since she was becoming quite a socialist. She interviewed the women and they told her about their terrible working conditions, about the fines that they suffered, and also about the biggest curse I suppose of matchmaking, which was fossy jaw.

Fossy jar was an occupational disease of the jar caused by exposure to phosphorus white faster us is incredibly toxic and it was being pumped in the air throughout Brian and May's match factory. There was no escape. There wasn't even a separate dining area for workers, so they would bring in a bit of bread for home, and working class girls lived on stale bread and tea. That was that.

That was their daily diet, no vegetables, no fruit, and by the time you got to eat at the phosphorus particles in the air have settled onto your bread, so you've got this awful, deadly seasoning that you can't see, but it's there on your food. The first symptoms of fazzy jar were too thick and a swollen lower jar, then your gums, cheeks and jar would develop putrid abscesses.

But the worst thing about it, the most horrendous and really sad aspect of it, is that your jawbone is decaying while you're still alive, and women would spit bits of bone the size of peas apparently out of these abscesses. It was a terrible situation. The met women endured these horrors for years. Enter any bescent. So the match women told any Besson all of this, and she recorded it

in this really hard, hissing, brilliant ascal. It's only short article, it's only a few columns, but it's called white Slavery in London, which is a really attention grabbing title. The article appeared in June. In it, Any Psson did not just recount the women's hazardous working conditions. She emphasized the gap between them and the quote monstrous dividends being paid to Briant and May's shareholders. It did not go over well with the company. Brian toon May read this article

and they are furious. They've worked really hard on their pr Brianson May, they're very like a modern company in that respect, you know, there are no slouches in getting good publicity and presenting their good side to the public. So people think Brianton may are quite a nice firm that are looking after their work as well, and this is really messing things up for them. The first thing the company does in response put pressure on the match

women themselves. They try to get them to sign a paper which is a pre prepared statement say that Annie Besson has lied, that everything she said is untrue, and that you know they love working for finding the old foss jewel is no problem at all, and they're all, you know, one big happy family and treated marvelously. Remember these women had no trade union, they had no employment contracts, and they knew that if they did the slightest thing wrong they would be fired. But they refused to sign

the paper. The foreman report that they come back to collect the papers and every single one in every single workshop on this huge factory site is blank. The women just won't sign. The first attempt to intimidate the match women hadn't worked. The next thing that they do is try to sack one girl, and they make up a reason for it because they don't want to admit that they're just doing it because I think she's probably one

of the people who've spoken to Annie Bessent. So they visibly enforcibly removed one of the women from the factory. And also the match women had this tremendous solidarity, absolutely no questions are They stick up for each other. So when she goes out the door, so do they. They lay down their tools and they go streaming out of this factory out on to the fair Field Road, out onto the Bow Road and they start parading the neighborhoods.

That's right. In the summer, workers, mostly young women and girls, walked out of Brian and May's match factory in East London. It was a bold act of defiance. And what I love about the way they get their message across because you know, no Facebook, no Twister in those days, so how do you do it? But they are very clever and they know that although they're supposed to be powerless, one thing they do have is numbers. They can make

a lot of noise and they do. They march the streets of Bow singing very disrespectful songs about their employers and how terrible their employers are and what they'd like to do to their employers, which is not nice. The women marched all over London, including straight through Trafalgar Square, they saying, quote, We'll hang old Brian on the sour apple tree, to the theme of Glory, Glory, hallelujah. Observers started putting their heads out of their home and office

windows to see what the first was about. So people throw down money, They throw down pennies and farthings, and the match women catch the money that's failing through the air in the long aprons that they wear to work, and that is their first strike funds. The young women start to get organized. They organized themselves brilliantly into a committee, had a vote on who was going to represent them

on the strike. Committee went back in put their demands to Brian and May, who basically told them not interested. You're all SATs no matter what you do. We're not listening to you. Bran and May outrage you know here we are. We're a rich Victorian gentlemen and these wretched rough set of girls as they called them, these common working people are trying to tell us what to do.

They were absolutely not having it. Things did not look good from the match women at the start, When they first walk out, local papers are saying, well, I mean, how dare they're They're very lucky to be employed by these lovely, top hated gentlemen who are so well esteemed and friends with government and friends of the great and

good and famous, and lucky to have jobs. The tide really turns quickly, because this is only around two weeks this strike, and the paper start to become much more sympathetic. The press started to shame Bryant and May and accusing their shareholders of profiting off the jars of poor women and girls. So the share price tumbles and Branton May are forced into a climb down, incredibly reluctant, with very

very very bad grace. Indeed, But the women, in around two weeks go back to work triumphant, and the first thing they demand is the right to form a trade union. The metal women had not only improved working conditions for themselves, they had ignited a chain reaction that would do the same for millions of other workers in the years ahead. We like to think that histories all great individuals, that it's kings and queens. We're quite happy with that individual

heroes and heroines. But you know, a sort of rabble of working class Irish, uneducated girls taking matches into their own hands, or you know, a bit scary, sounds a bit revolutionary, so we tend to talk that down. Historians might not have taken much note of that victory, but other workers at the time certainly did. Working people are not stupid, and you would have to be stupid not to notice a large, large group of workers, four Drew women were on strike achieving what had never been achieved.

People are gone on strike, but no one had had a victory against a huge, important, powerful firm like that before, and another group of famous London laborers, the dark workers would certainly have noticed. They couldn't have missed it because they were married to match women. Matchwomen and dockers traditionally dated each other, knew each other, you know, they were each other's mothers and sisters. They all were. They were

the same people, essentially the same Eastern people. Three months after the match women went on strike, more than one hundred thousand male doc workers at the Port of London started their own strike. These women are absolutely the inspiration for this huge strike of hundreds of thousands, which spreads and spreads all over its practically a general strike, really a national strike. It spreads all over the country and

to other parts of the world as well. The leaders of the match Women provided guidance and encouragement to their male counterparts, so they all follow the match Women's example. They go out on strike and their demand for coming back to work as you must, let us form a union. Hundreds and hundreds of new unions form over the next few years. Just over a year later, the number of trade union members in Great Britain had more than doubled

to nearly two million. Thanks to what the match Women began, Great Britain and other countries now have laws governing health and safety in the workplace, and from this eventually really grow the seeds of the Labor Party in Britain, and I'm very pleased that are lamented. Former leader of the Labor Party Jeremy Corbyn acknowledged my book and my work has said in s that the match Women were the mothers of the modern labor and trajing and movement, and

that really was everything that I'd ever once said. Thanks in part to Phosphorus, a revolution in labor relations and workers safety swept over England and the world in the late nineteenth century, but for millions of others, there would be no hiding from phosphorus destructive capability. In the twentieth century, nearly three d years after hinnig Brand discovered phosphorus, his hometown of Hamburg would suffer an almost unimaginable tragedy at its hands. We all need a break from the constant

cycle to learn something new, to gain new perspectives. The Great Courses Plus streaming service is an excellent resource to expand our knowledge on a variety of subjects or pick up a new hobby. I've been enjoying the Great Courses Plus while researching this season of flashback lectures like Playball, the Rise of Baseball is America's pastime, History of the Supreme Court, and Battlefield Europe have helped me connect the

dots on several stories from history. Right now, they're giving our listeners a special limited time offer a free month of unlimited access to their entire library. Sign up now through our special U r L go to the Great Courses Plus dot Com slash as. That's the Great Courses Plus dot Com slash o z y the Great Courses Plus dot Com slash As. It wasn't long before the qualities of phosphorus were harnessed for one of human kind's

favorite pastimes, war ken Ashley. Again, bostrous was first adopted for military use because when the white phosphorus is exposed to oxygen, it burns and produces a heavy white smoke. So its original use was was just to produce smoke cover. You might have seen some of the photographs of World War One trench warfare where there is smoke covering the no man's land between the armies. And then it became used in for tracer shells, so you fired a bullet,

the phosphorus would burn. You can see where the bullets were going particularly night, and think it very easy to aim, aim the bullet. And then came phosphorus bombs. They were first used by the Allies in World War Two. You know, after Hitler started bombing bombing England, that the retribution from the from the English was to do these massive raids with a thousand planes. And they decided to pick a pick a town and try and try and just moment

repeatedly over several nights. The aim was to destroy an entire German city and to demoralize its inhabitants. It was called Operation Gomorrah, and for good reason. Starting in July and continuing for seven more nights, Allied bombing raids dropped over two thousand tons of burning phosphorus material on Hamburg, Germany's second largest city and where hitting Brandt had discovered the volatile element. At the time, it was the heaviest assault in the history of aerial warfare. It was like

a volcano going off. The bombers said that he could see it from from halfway from England. This this huge firestorm. The asphalt streets of Hamburg literally boiled. The firestorm left more than thirty five thousand people dead, mostly women and children. Some were burned alive, some suffocated, others were sucked up

into the air. The upward draft was so was so much it even it even just it suffocated people even if they weren't burnt, just because of lack of oxygen, because the amount of fire going on, the oxygen was combusted, so it was. It was a pretty brutish, sort of crude attempt to break the will of the people by just destroying everything. A year and a half later, the Allies firebombed another German city, Dresden, the day after the

Audi had strike at Dresden. The seventeen bombers of the eighth United States Air Force gave us a here repeat for BOMs. Dresden is a heap of ruins. It has been smashed to atoms. One of the unfortunate souls in Dresden during the fire bombing was the American writer Kurt Vonnegut. After the bombing, as Vonnegut put it in his classic novel slaughter House five, Dresden was like the moon then

quote one thing was clear. Absolutely everybody in the city was supposed to be dead, regardless of what they were, and that anybody moved in it represented a flaw in the design. We've about the destructive capacity of phosphorus, but the element, in the form of phosphates plays a hugely productive role for humanity as well. Three quarters of the planet is kept alive today because because the phosphorus that grows the food that keeps us alive has been dug

under the ground. It is thanks to phosphorus based fertilizers that we can produce food at the scale we do today. But like so many commodities found largely in the ground, it is a scarce resource. So there's a real shortage of phosphorus, and geopolitically, it's I think it's going to become deep flashpoint of the twenty one century because so few people, so few countries control most of the phosphorus

and the planet. Just five countries Morocco, China, the US, Jordan, and South Africa control of the world's remaining phosphate rock reserves, and there's no good replacement for phosphorus once we run out. Every person, an animal on the planet depends on phosphorus, and there are roughly ten animals for every person. In reality, there's around seven d any billion people equivalents on the planet right now, burning through fosters at a frightening rate.

And anything keeps me up, wakes me up at night. It's uh, it's a dual threat of climate change and a global foster's shortage that leads to mass starvation and the legs we've never seen before. Researchers are experimenting with yes urine to help develop new fertilizers to address this phosphate shortage, but as of yet, there has not been a breakthrough to rival hinting brands over three centuries ago.

So what did we learned today? First, there's a chance, a slight chance, that that crazy neighbor of yours collecting urine in his basement is actually onto something. Second, any one of us can become an accidental historian like Louise Raw. It just requires some persistence and a willingness to challenge what you've always been told. And finally, it takes an awful lot of nerve to take on a corporate giant as a lowly factory worker, but it certainly doesn't require

any balls. Flashback is written and hosted by me Sean Braswell, senior writer and executive producer at Ozzie. It was produced by Robert Coulos, Tracy Moran, Orio Digiza, and Shannon Williamson. Chris Hoff engineered our show special thanks to the crew at I Heart Radio podcast Networks, especially Sophie Lichterman and Jack O'Brien. Make sure to subscribe to Flashback on the I Heart Radio app or listen wherever you get your podcasts.

Flashback is the latest podcast from Azzi, a modern media company producing original TV series, festivals, news and podcasts for curious people. Ozzie's unique storytelling focuses on the new and the next, whether that's forward, looking news and features, bold new perspectives on TV, or brand new ways of looking at history today. In my lecture notes a couple of interesting and somewhat disturbing facts which connect phosphorus to some

of the topics we covered in earlier episodes of Flashback. First, did you know that, well many American states were banning abortion and contraception in the late nineteenth century, desperate Swedish women were resorting to a very dangerous method of abortion. They would swallow the heads of phosphorus matches and the hopes of inducing a miscarriage. And Second, perhaps the most insidious use of phosphorus in war has been its use

in chemical weapons. In fact, by nineteen forty four, Adolph Hitler and the Nazis had developed a powerful phosphorus based nerve gas for which there was no defense, and as things went south in the war, Hitler's generals urged him to make use of his secret weapon, but for some reason, the fewer never played that ace up his sleeve to dive deeper. Head to Assie dot com slash flashback. That's

oz Y dot com slash Flashback. There you can find my other or lecture notes from today's episode featuring extended interviews, links to further reading and more information on the unintended consequences of elements like phosphorus, as well as links to other hidden stories from history uncovered by me and other reporters at Aussie

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