Soot Buried Southeast Michigan
The state's air was menaced by uncontrolled emissions from furnaces, boilers,
chimneys, and even passing ships on the Detroit River by the late 19th Century.
Detroit enacted its first "smoke abatement" ordinance in 1885, but
tough controls on what became known as air pollution followed World War II.
In 1936 the chief smoke inspector for Detroit estimated that 350 tons of
"soot, fly-ash and dirt" fell each year on every square mile of
Detroit, up from 56 tons in 1931. "Smoking factory chimneys, long pointed
to as symbols of civic prosperity, actually are signs that money is being wasted
and health menaced," said Charles J. McCabe. He warned of dangers caused by
the release of sulfur dioxide from coal burning, saying it weathered paint,
harmed green vegetation, and caused inflammation of the nose and throat. The
city's reduction in smoke inspectors from 12 to two had crippled the program, he
complained.
A Detroit Free Press campaign to clean up the twin civic plagues of rats and
thick smoke helped propel the city's revised 1947 air quality ordinance,
considered the first modern law of its kind in the state. The death of 20 people
during an air pollution episode in Donora, Pennsylvania in 1948 made air
pollution a national concern. Wayne County adopted an air pollution regulation
in 1955; Michigan's first air pollution law took effect in 1965.