Exhibit: This Lead is Killing Us: A History of Citizens Fighting Lead Poisoning in Their Communities

Date
through
Description

On display at Falk Library from February 12 through March 22, 2024. Free and open to the public during regular library hours.

Join us on February 20, at 2 p.m. at the School of Public Health Room 1155 for a Panel Q&A event with local leaders who are taking on lead poisoning. Please note that exhibit will be temporarily on display at the School of Public Health on February 20.

About the Exhibit:

This exhibit explores the story of citizen action taken against an environmental danger. Lead exposure can cause neurological problems and sometimes even death; yet this metal has been pervasive in many aspects of American life for over a century. Historically, mining, battery manufacturing, smelting, and enameling industries included lead in their production processes, impacting factory workers and consumers. Manufacturers added lead to household paints and gasoline, endangering the health of families and polluting the air through exhaust fumes. To protect themselves against the dangers of lead poisoning, scientists, families, and individuals opposed industries, housing authorities, and elected officials.

Historical books by Bernardino Ramazzini, known as the Father of Occupational Medicine, are viewable in the exhibit display case.

Many online resources are available to read further and learn more:

Information for Visitors:

Visit Falk Library between February 12 and March 22, 2024, to view the exhibit. We recommend allowing 30 minutes to review the exhibit content on display.

Falk Library is located on Pitt’s campus, in Alan Magee Scaife Hall. Please enter the building from Lothrop Street, and proceed to Floor M (Mezzanine), below Floor 3. Visitors will be received during library open hours.

All visitors to the exhibit with Pitt ID can enter to win a $25 Panera gift card. Bring your Pitt ID to the Main Desk when you visit the exhibit.

*The National Library of Medicine produced this exhibition and companion website.

Scaife Hall, Falk Library
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