If You Poison Us: Uranium and Native Americans

Author(s): Peter H. Eichstaedt (1994)


The supply of uranium that fueled the Cold War came largely from the Four Corners area of the Colorado Plateau. Some of the richest deposits were found on the Navajo Reservation, where about one-fourth of the miners and millers were Native Americans. For nearly three decades in the face of growing evidence that uranium mining was dangerous, state and federal agencies neglected to warn the miners or to impose safety measures in the mines.

Three Mile Island (Images of America)

Author(s): Erik V. Fasick (2018)


Construction of the Unit 1 reactor began on Three Mile Island in May 1968, with the production of commercial electricity beginning in 1974. Approval for the construction of the Unit 2 reactor was granted in November 1969, and it was only producing commercial electricity for less than 90 days when on March 28, 1979, a loud roar erupted from the nuclear power plant that shook windows and awakened residents in the communities on both sides of the Susquehanna River. This loud warning was the result of a series of mechanical and human errors that contributed towards a partial meltdown of the Unit 2 reactor and the most severe nuclear power accident in the history of the United States. In the days that followed, many residents of the surrounding communities left their homes and possessions out of fear of radioactive plumes, meltdowns, and exploding hydrogen bubbles. Those who remained behind faced anxiety and uncertainty, as information flowing from the power plant circumvented the truth and lacked credibility. As the Unit 2 reactor cooled, protests and court battles ensued as attempts were made to restart the power plant's dormant Unit 1 reactor. The Three Mile Island Nuclear Generating Station symbolized the fight over nuclear power as a safe and viable energy source in the late 20th century.


The Greenpeace Book of the Nuclear Age: The Hidden History, the Human Cost

Author: John May (1990)

A comprehensive historical record of nuclear accidents and radiation incidents worldwide, including waste disposal messes, lost nuclear subs, and leaky reactors. “A book about accidents and risk, the nature of chance and the oppressive weight of secrecy, about official lies and the true cost of atomic energy, it incorporates technical information, history, and politics into a searing document.”

Three Mile Island: Thirty Minutes to Meltdown

Author: Daniel F. Ford (1982)

Daniel Ford, former executive director of the Union of Concerned Scientists, explains what happened at Three Mile Island, including the development of the plant, the causes of the accident and how it was handled, who and what is to blame, and what Three Mile Island means to the future of nuclear power.

Fallout: An American Nuclear Tragedy

Author: Phillip L. Franklin (1989)

The story of nuclear testing in Nevada in the 1950s and 1960s, and the subsequent health effects on the unsuspecting people downwind in Nevada, Utah and Arizona.  The book is framed around the 1982 trial by cancer victims and their survivors, which the author, a Pulitzer Prize winning journalist, attended.

Atomic America: How a Deadly Explosion and a Feared Admiral Changed the Course of Nuclear History

Author: Todd Tucker (2009)

Historian Todd Tucker investigates the story of the only fatal nuclear meltdown in US history, which took place at a testing station in rural Idaho in 1961.  “A shocking tale of negligence and subterfuge... the Army and its contractors had deliberately obscured the true cases of this terrible accident, the result of poor engineering as much as uncontrolled passions.”

The Plutonium Files: America’s Secret Medical Experiments in the Cold War

Author: Eileen Welsome (2000)

In order to learn about the health effects of plutonium, the Manhattan Project’s medical doctors secretly injected eighteen patients across the country with plutonium. This was covered up, even from the patients themselves, for over fifty years

The Day We Bombed Utah: America’s Most Lethal Secret

Author: John G. Fuller (1985)

The story of the Atomic Energy Commission's atomic bomb testing in Southwestern Utah and Eastern Nevada in the early 1950s. Most of the bombs were more powerful than Hiroshima, yet the government assured the local population that they were safe, and denied responsibility for their ensuing illness.

The Girls of Atomic City: The Untold Story of the Women Who Helped Win World War II

Author: Denise Kiernan (2013)

The true story of the thousands of women who worked on the Manhattan Project in the secret city of Oak Ridge, Tennessee during World War II. Nine women are highlighted in this book: janitors, chemists, secretaries, even factory workers who unknowingly separated uranium.

We Almost Lost Detroit

Author: John G. Fuller (1975)

Recommended by Fairewinds board member Les Kanat, “We Almost Lost Detroit” details the history of Fermi 1, America’s first commercial breeder reactor, with particular emphasis on the partial meltdown that occurred in 1966 and ultimately closed the plant. This partial meltdown could have left the Detroit region virtually uninhabitable. This history book is particularly relevant today, as Detroit Edison attempts to open another reactor on the Fermi site.