IC 7487 Activities of the Health and Safety Division, Bureau of Mines United States Department of the Interior during the War Years, 1941-45

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
D. Harrington
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
51
File Size:
5413 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1949

Abstract

"FOREWORDVirtually all government agencies undertook many additional responsibilities during the period immediately preceding World War II; these responsibilities increased vastly in importance and scope after the actual declaration of war following the attack on Pearl Harbor. The Bureau of Mines was one of the agencies thus affected, and it was called upon to perform many duties foreign to its normal peacetime activities.The Health and Safety Division of the Bureau of Mines, at that time designated the Health and Safety Branch, was given several important and difficult duties and responsibilities of an unusual nature because of the war while of necessity-continuing its normal functions of assisting the mineral industries in the preservation of life and health and the protection of property, this being of especial importance in wartime because of the pre-eminent importance of having maximum output of essentially all types of mineral products. Some of these additional functions were given to the Health and Safety Division because the organization of the Division, with its field set-up dividing the Nation into districts with competent, experienced personnel in charge of its work, provided the nucleus of personnel and procedure through which rapid and smooth expanded functioning was feasible.In addition to the responsibilities directly attributable to definite war activities, such as the administration of the wartime Federal. Explosives Act and the Mineral Production Security Branch a new branch (then designated division) was formed to investigate coal-mine health and safety problems after the enactment of the Federal Coal-Mine Inspections and Investigations Act, which became a law on May 7, 1941, but which actually began to function actively after the declaration of war in December 1941.The purpose of this publication is to provide a brief historical record of the activities of the Health and Safety Division as a whole and of its individual branches during the war. The detailed record has been filed in the Archives Building, Washington, D. C."
Citation

APA: D. Harrington  (1949)  IC 7487 Activities of the Health and Safety Division, Bureau of Mines United States Department of the Interior during the War Years, 1941-45

MLA: D. Harrington IC 7487 Activities of the Health and Safety Division, Bureau of Mines United States Department of the Interior during the War Years, 1941-45. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1949.

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