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Eating Dangerously: How a Chemist’s “Poison Squad” Won the Battle for Food Safety in the US (Rebroadcast)
December 19 @ 11:00 am - 12:00 pm PST
FreeSponsored by ACS Webinars and ACS Division of the History of Chemistry
11:00am-Noon, Online, Free, Registration required
- This is a rebroadcast of our most popular webinars of 2024. ACS members can view the recording in our library now.
- There will be no Q&A, you will be listening to a recording!
- Thursday, December 19, 2024 @ 2-3pm ET
- Free to register with ACS ID
In the late 19th century, simply eating food could be a genuine hazard. To increase the shelf life of their products, food manufacturers intentionally added dangerous chemicals like formaldehyde and salicylic acid to everything from milk to meat without any of the regulatory oversight that we take for granted today.
Join Pulitzer Prize winner and New York Times-bestselling author Deborah Blum during this rebroadcast as she reveals the dramatic true story of how food was made safer in the United States during a 30 year food safety battle for consumer protection by chemist Dr. Harvey Washington Wiley and his heroic Poison Squad.
Register now for this rebroadcast of one of our most popular webinars of 2024 to discover the surprisingly thrilling history of food safety standards in America – a story of politics, poison and a federal chemist turned crusader who took us from a century deemed the “great American stomachache” to the landmark 1906 Food and Drug Act.
This ACS Webinar is moderated by Carmen J. Giunta, Professor Emeritus of Le Moyne College and is co-produced with the ACS Division of the History of Chemistry.
What You Will Learn
- What the US food supply was like before regulation
- How 19th century food chemists investigated the problem
- The science and the politics of the first consumer safety laws – and their continuing influence