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Ulster Med J. 2008 September; 77(3): 191–200.
PMCID: PMC2604477
Asbestos and Ship-Building: Fatal Consequences
John Hedley-Whyte and Debra R Milamed
Accepted May 8, 2008.
Abstract
The severe bombing of Belfast in 1941 had far-reaching consequences. Harland and Wolff was crippled. The British Merchant Ship Building Mission to the USA was being constrained by the UK treasury. On being told of the Belfast destruction, the British Mission and the United States Maritime Commission were emboldened. The result was 2,710 Liberty Ships launched to a British design. The necessary asbestos use associated with this and other shipbuilding, after a quarter century or more latency, is a genesis of malignancy killing thousands. Reversal of studies on asbestos limitation of fire propagation was crucial to Allied strategic planning of mass-fires which resulted in the slaughter of one to two million civilians. Boston and Belfast institutions made seminal discoveries about asbestos use and its sequelae.
Keywords: Asbestos, Shipbuilding, Standards, Incendiary bombing