Smoke abatement
Smoke abatement programs are designed to reduce air pollution caused by smoke, primarily from burning fuels such as bituminous coal used in industry. Various strategies are used, including regulations, technological advancements, and public awareness campaigns. Early efforts In the United Kingdom in the 19th century focused on reducing smoke from industrial sources. In the 20th century railroad locomotives switched from coal to diesel. More recent initiatives address a wider range of pollutants and sources. I. G. Simmons, An Environmental History of Great Britain (2001).
In the United States, rapid industrialization after the Civil War led to a massive increase in soft coal consumption, with coal smoke degrading air quality in the fast-growing cities, and affecting public health. Activism grew in the early 20th century, often led by women’s groups concerned about cleanliness and health impacts on vulnerable populations. By 1912, many large cities had smoke abatement laws and inspectors. The Clean Air Act of 1963, administered by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) became a foundational law controlling air pollution nationwide, leading to significant improvements in air quality and public health.David Stradling, Smokestacks and Progressives: Environmentalists, Engineers, and Air Quality in America, 1881–1951 (Johns Hopkins UP. 1999) pp 186–191. Samuel P. Hays, A history of environmental politics since 1945. (2000)
Comparative history: UK and US
=Miasma or germs?=
The Miasma theory was a prominent idea in the 18th and 19th centuries that gave a false explanation of how deadly epidemics like cholera, yellow fever and malaria ("bad air") originated and spread. It said that illnesses were caused by breathing in a mysterious "miasma"—a harmful vapor that arose from decaying organic matter. Epidemics often came in the summer because that is when people pent more time outside. The theory motivated an enormous emphasis on public sanitation in major cities to remove smelly pollution, especially human and animal excrement, from streets and back alleys. The theory collapsed when physicians accepted the new germ theory of disease in the late 19th century. Germs coughed up by an infected person or spread by certain types of mosquitos or hookworms were the real reason people caught an infectious disease.John Duffy, The Sanitarians: A History of American Public Health (1990) pp. 67-77, 129.
=The challenge=
The emergence of great factories and the concomitant immense growth in coal consumption gave rise to an unprecedented level of air pollution in industrial centers.Stephen Mosley, The Chimney of the World: A History of Smoke Pollution in Victorian and Edwardian Manchester (2013) After 1900 the large volume of industrial chemical discharges added to the growing load of untreated human waste.{{cite web |url=http://www.ametsoc.org/sloan/cleanair/ |title=History of the Clean Air Act |access-date=14 February 2006 |first=James R. |last=Fleming |author2=Bethany R. Knorr |publisher=American Meteorological Society |archive-date=10 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110610133251/http://www.ametsoc.org/sloan/cleanair/ |url-status=live }}
The rapid industrial and urban expansion of America after the Civil War was heavily fueled by bituminous coal, which powered everything from buildings and factories to ships and trains. This widespread reliance on coal led to a dramatic surge in its consumption, exploding 2000% from 21 million tons in 1870 to 407 million tons in forty years. Bituminous coal dominated the nation's energy supply, supporting one million jobs in the coal industry that stretched from mines to every city and town. This progress raised the GNP, but lowered the quality of life in the urban environment, especially downtown and in neighborhoods downwind of the factory districts.David Stradling, Smokestacks and Progressives (1999) pp. 6–16.
=The reformers=
The origins of the environmental movement in Europe and North America lay in response to increasing levels of smoke pollution in the atmosphere during the Industrial Revolution, which began in Great Britain in the 18th century and spread to the United States after 1812. The pervasive problem of coal smoke plagued major cities in Great Britain and the United States for well over a hundred years, according to David Stradling and Peter Thorsheim. From London, Manchester, and Glasgow to Pittsburgh, Chicago, St. Louis, and Cincinnati, industrial centers relying on soft bituminous coal as their primary fuel source suffered through decades of severe air pollution before any relief. British cities, particularly London, were notorious with prolonged smoke and soot.Peter Brimblecombe, The Big Smoke: A History of Air Pollution in London Since Medieval Times (Methuen, 1987). Many U.S. cities faced strikingly similar environmental crises during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.Henry Obermeyer, Stop that smoke! (1933). Across the Atlantic, activists shared deep concerns about the effects of coal smoke on vulnerable people and the quality of environment. Despite their different economic, political, and cultural systems, both defined the problem in comparable terms. This led to parallel movements dedicated to smoke abatement, where sanitarians, doctors, engineers, and middle and upper-class reformers, often led by women, engaged in an international dialogue, learning from each other's approaches to finding a solution.David Stradling and Peter Thorsheim, "The Smoke of Great Cities: British and American Efforts to Control Air Pollution, 1860-1914" Environmental History (1999) 4#1 pp. 6–31.
The key problem was that at first industry and the entire community welcomed smoke—it meant plants were in operation—chimneys without smoke was a bad sign that something had gone wrong. The business and political leadership of the industrial cities were enthusiastic backers of the industry; heavy black smoke meant prosperity and high profits. The workers knew that no smoke meant no paycheck.Stephen Mosley, "Selling the smokeless city: advertising images and smoke abatement in urban-industrial Britain, circa 1840–1960." History and Technology 32.2 (2016): 201-211 [https://eprints.leedsbeckett.ac.uk/id/eprint/2935/1/Mosley%20History%20and%20Technology%20paper.docx online].
A new group now entered the scene: women were in charge of cleanliness—whether they ranged from maids who did the laundry, swept every day, and scrubbed the soot off the furniture, to high society hostesses who took pride in their hospitality. Furthermore women were traditionally responsible for the health of people whose breathing was seriously impeded, especially young children, the elderly, and the sick. Women organized to demand a solution. Suellen M. Hoy, " ‘Municipal Housekeeping’: The Role of Women in Improving Urban Sanitation Practices, 1880–1917." in Pollution and Reform in American Cities, 1870–1930 ed. Martin Melosi (1980): 173–176. In the U.S., the General Federation of Women's Clubs and the Daughters of the American Revolution were leaders in the conservation movement. The National Association of Colored Women's Clubs raised environmental awareness in a minority community that had been segregated into the wrong side of the tracks.Elizabeth D. Blum, "The Gunfighters of Northwood Manor: How History Debunks Myths of the Environmental Justice Movement" in Energy metropolis: an environmental history of Houston and the Gulf Coast edited by Martin V. Melosi and Joseph A. Pratt. (2007) pp.224-240.Samuel P. Hays, Conservation and the Gospel of Efficiency: The Progressive Conservation Movement, 1890–1920 (1959). p. 142Jess Taylor, "The unequal impact of air pollution on women" Clean Air Fund (March 7, 2025) [https://www.cleanairfund.org/news-item/impact-of-air-pollution-on-women/ online]"Celebrating the women making clean air a reality" Clean Air Fund (March 8, 2025) [https://www.cleanairfund.org/news-item/celebrating-the-women-making-clean-air-a-reality/ online]
By 1912, 23 of the 28 largest American cities had passed smoke abatement ordinances, and nearly all had a smoke inspector. The anti-smoke movement in the United States emerged after 1910 as informal local networks of middle class activists who focused on the emissions of smoke by factories, railroads, and service industries. Some business leaders were on the vanguard of city clean-air campaigns. Shutting down major industries was of course out of the question, but persuasion did work, as the Weather Bureau reported steady declines in the number of smoky days. Pittsburgh had 202 smoky days in 1912 and 144 in 1914.Robert D. Grinder, "The Anti-Smoke Crusades" (1973) pp. 137–140..David Stradling, "To Breathe Pure Air: Cincinnati's Smoke Abatement Crusade, 1904–1916," Queen City Heritage 55 (Spring 1997): 2-18
The term "pollution" in the modern sense was rare before the 1860s. The term "air pollution" was seldom used before he 1930s. According to Adam Rome:
To describe what we now call air pollution--i.e., the gaseous, chemical, and metallic by-products of combustion and industrial processes--people usually talked of "the smoke nuisance." There were several variations of that term --"the smoke problem," "the smoke evil," even "the smoke plague."Adam W. Rome, "Coming to Terms with Pollution: The Language of Environmental Reform, 1865-1915" Environmental History (1996) 1#3 pp. 6-28 {{JSTOR|3985154}}
United Kingdom
{{Main|Air pollution in the United Kingdom}}
Air pollution in the United Kingdom has long been considered a significant health issue, and it causes numerous other environmental problems such as damage to buildings,{{cite book |last1=Brimblecombe |first1=Peter |author1-link=Peter Brimblecombe|title=The Effects Of Air Pollution On The Built Environment |date=2003 |publisher=World Scientific |isbn=1783261366 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=m--3CgAAQBAJ}}{{cite journal |last1=Brimblecombe |first1=Peter |last2=Grossi |first2=Carlota M. |title=Potential Damage to Modern Building Materials from 21st Century Air Pollution |journal=The Scientific World Journal |date=2010 |volume=10 |pages=116–125 |doi=10.1100/tsw.2010.17 |pmid=20098955 |pmc=5763901 |doi-access=free }} forests, and crops.{{cite book |last1=Emberson |first1=Lisa |last2=Ashmore |first2=Mike |last3=Murray |first3=Frank |title=Air Pollution Impacts on Crops and Forests: A Global Assessment |date=2003 |publisher=World Scientific |isbn=9781860942921}} Many areas, especially major cities like London and Manchester, regularly exceed legal and recommended pollution levels.{{cite news |last1=Powell |first1=Tom |title=44 UK towns and cities have air 'too dangerous to breathe', report claims |url=https://www.standard.co.uk/news/uk/more-than-44-uk-towns-and-cities-have-air-too-dangerous-to-breathe-report-claims-a3672021.html |access-date=20 September 2021 |work=Evening Standard |date=21 October 2017}}{{cite news |title=UK's most polluted towns and cities revealed |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-43964341 |access-date=20 September 2021 |work=BBC News |date=4 May 2018}} Air pollution in the UK is a major cause of diseases such as asthma, lung disease, stroke, cancer, and heart disease, and it costs the health service, society, and businesses over £20 billion each year.{{cite book |title=Every breath we take: the lifelong impact of air pollution. Report of a working party |date=February 2016 |publisher=Royal College of Physicians |location=London |isbn=978-1-86016-567-2 |page=14 |url=https://www.rcp.ac.uk/media/jzul5jgn/every-breath-we-take-the-lifelong-impact-of-air-pollution-full-report.pdf |access-date=3 December 2024}} Outdoor pollution alone is estimated to cause 40,000 early deaths each year, which is about 8.3% of deaths.{{cite news|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/health-35629034|title=Pollution link to 40,000 deaths a year|first=Michelle|last=Roberts|work=BBC News|date=23 February 2016}}{{cite news|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/health-41678533|title=Pollution linked to one in six deaths|first=Katie|last=Silver|work=BBC News|date=20 October 2017}}
=Prehistory to the 20th century=
{{Main|Air pollution in the United Kingdom}}
The long history of air pollution in Britain predates the Industrial Revolution by centuries. It began with medieval mining and smelting operations such as Odin Mine. Swiss ice-core research reveals that lead pollution from Peak District smelting between 1170-1216 matched Industrial Revolution levels, with pollution spikes correlating to monarchs' expanding power and increased mining activity. King Edward I passed Britain's first environmental law in 1306, banning sulfur-rich seacoal from Northumbria due to its toxic smoke, though the legislation proved largely ineffective through the reign of Queen Elizabeth I.William H. Te Brake, "Air pollution and fuel crises in preindustrial London, 1250–1650." Technology and Culture 16.3 (1975): 337-359.
The Industrial Revolution from 1700 onward made Britain the world's leading source of carbon air pollution until being surpassed by the United States (1888) and Germany (1913). Urban air pollution killed about 1.4 million Britons from 1840 to 1900. The chief causes were pulmonary tuberculosis and bronchitis. J.R. McNeill Something new under the sun: An environmental history of the twentieth-century world (2000) p.58.This period saw the emergence of health advocacy groups like Leeds' Committee for the Consumption of Smoke, and landmark legislation including the Alkali Act 1863 (regulating industrial acid emissions) and the Public Health Act 1875 (addressing both health and visual pollution effects).Peter Brimblecombe, The Big Smoke: A History of Air Pollution in London Since Medieval Times (1987). pp.132–149.McGuire, Sara A. "Products of Industry: Pollution, Health, and England’s Industrial Revolution." in The Bioarchaeology of Structural Violence: A Theoretical Framework for Industrial Era Inequality (2020): 203-231.
Systematic pollution study began with Robert Angus Smith's first acid rain measurements in 1852, followed by the Committee for the Investigation of Atmospheric Pollution's network of monitoring stations.Peter Reed, Acid Rain and the Rise of the Environmental Chemist in Nineteenth-Century Britain (Routledge, 2016). p. 189. Early 1900s London studies found smoke caused 20% of fogs and significantly increased death rates during foggy periods. By the 20th century, respiratory diseases became Britain's leading cause of death, with bronchitis death rates in the early 1950s reaching 65 per 100,000 - more than double any other country's rate.{{cite EB1911 |last1=Masson |first1=David Orme |last2=Chubb|first2=Laurence Wensley |wstitle=Smoke |volume=25 |page=276}}{{cite web|url=https://api.parliament.uk/historic-hansard/lords/1955/feb/16/air-pollution|title=AIR POLLUTION|website=api.parliament.uk|access-date=12 April 2020}}Eric Ashby, and Mary Anderson, The Politics of Clean Air (Oxford University Press, 1981).
=Recent=
==The Great Smog of 1952==
{{Main|Great Smog of London}}
The deadly London fog of December 1952 was the critical catalyst for modern air quality legislation. This "pea-souper," which was far deadlier than previous fogs, caused over 12,000 deaths. It shocked the government and the public into action.Devra Davis, "The Great Smog" History Today 52#12 (December 2002) [https://www.historytoday.com/archive/feature/great-smog#:~:text=Devra%20Davis%20looks%20at%20the%20London%20Smog%20disaster%20of%201952-53.&text=London%20during%20the%20%27Great%20Smog,her%20accession%20remains%20largely%20unsung. online] This disaster led directly to the formation of the Beaver Committee. Its report established clean air as a national priority, quantified the economic costs of pollution, and laid the groundwork for the Clean Air Act 1956. Key recommendations included empowering local authorities to create smokeless zones—an idea pioneered in Manchester and Coventry—and transferring control of complex industrial emissions to the expert Alkali Inspectorate.B.W. Clapp, Environmental History of Britain since the Industrial Revolution (1994) pp.43-52.On the Beaver Committee see Committee on Air Pollution, "Interim Report" (1953) [https://archive.org/details/b32170129/ online]
The UK government has plans to improve pollution due to traffic, mainly through the introduction of urban Clean Air Zones{{cite news |last1=Cannon |first1=Matthew |title=Clean air zones: Where will UK drivers pay for polluting?|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-47389830 |access-date=25 November 2024 |work=BBC News |date=12 April 2019}} and banning the sale of new fossil fuel cars by 2030.{{cite web |title=Government takes historic step towards net-zero with end of sale of new petrol and diesel cars by 2030 |url=https://www.gov.uk/government/news/government-takes-historic-step-towards-net-zero-with-end-of-sale-of-new-petrol-and-diesel-cars-by-2030 |website=Gov.uk |publisher=UK Government |access-date=25 November 2024 |date=18 November 2020}} It has also phased out the use of coal in its electrical power generation.{{cite news|work=BBC News|title=UK to finish with coal power after 142 years |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c5y35qz73n8o |access-date=25 November 2024 |date=30 September 2024}}
United States
=Clean Air Act of 1963=
The Clean Air Act (CAA) is the primary federal air quality law, intended to reduce and control air pollution nationwide. The new law set up two types of air quality standards: primary and secondary. Primary standards focused on safeguarding public health. Secondary standards aimed to protect public welfare, which included preventing harm to materials, agricultural production, ecosystems, and even visibility. This meant the Act's goals for air quality went beyond just health, encompassing a broad range of pollution issues. The federal government was responsible for setting these minimum national standards, and then individual state agencies would implement them.Samuel P. Hays, "Clean Air: From the 1970 Act to the 1977 Amendments." Duquesne Law Review 17 (1978): pp. 33-35.
Initially enacted in 1963 and amended many times since, it is one of the United States' first and most influential modern environmental laws. It is administered by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), in coordination with state, local, and tribal governments.{{cite web |title=The Plain English Guide to the Clean Air Act |url=https://www.epa.gov/sites/default/files/2015-08/documents/peg.pdf |date=April 2007 |publisher=US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) |location=Washington, DC |page=19 |id=EPA 456/K-07-001}}{{rp|2–3}}
The EPA's National Ambient Air Quality Standards program sets standards for concentrations of certain pollutants in outdoor air, and the National Emissions Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants program which sets standards for emissions of particular hazardous pollutants from specific sources. Other programs create requirements for vehicle fuels, industrial facilities, and other technologies and activities that impact air quality. Newer programs tackle specific problems, including acid rain, ozone layer protection, and climate change. The Clean Air Act has substantially reduced air pollution and improved US air quality—benefits which EPA credits with saving trillions of dollars and many thousands of lives each year, especially the most vulnerable youngest and oldest age groups.Kristie Ross et al., "The impact of the clean air act." Journal of pediatrics 161.5 (2012): 781+. [https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4133758/pdf/nihms604165.pdf online]Tina Adler, "Aging research: the future face of environmental health." Environmental Health Perspectives 111.14 (2003): A760-A765. [https://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/doi/pdf/10.1289/ehp.111-a760 online]
See also
- Air pollution
- Air pollution in the United States
- Air pollution in Canada
- Air pollution in China
- Air pollution in Germany
- Air pollution in India
- Air pollution in Delhi
- Air pollution in South Korea
- Air pollution in the United Kingdom
- List of countries by air pollution
- List of most-polluted cities by particulate matter concentration
- List of least-polluted cities by particulate matter concentration
- Clean Air Act (United States), 1963 and since
- Diesel Emissions Reduction Act (2005; amended 2010)
- Railroad electrification in the United States
- Smoke inhalation
- Smoking ban
References
Further reading
- Davis, Devra. When Smoke Ran Like Water: Tales Of Environmental Deception And The Battle Against Pollution (2008) [https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC1125339/ online review of this book]
- Kessel, A (2008) "Air and Public Health An Investigation Using Four Historical Case Studies. Other thesis, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine. DOI: https://doi.org/10.17037/PUBS.04649958
- McNeill, J.R. Something New Under the Sun: An Environmental History of the Twentieth-century World (WW Norton, 2000) pp. 50–117, worldwide coverage. [https://archive.org/details/somethingnewunde0000mcne_l2y9 table of contents]
=UK=
- Ashby, Eric and Mary Anderson. The Politics of Clean Air. (Oxford University Press, 1981).
- Ashby, E., and Anderson, M., "Studies in the Politics of Environmental Protection: The Historical Roots of the British Clean Air Act, 1956:1. The Awakening of Public Opinion over Industrial Smoke, 1843-53", Interdisciplinary Science Reviews, Vol. 1, 1976, pp. 279–290.
- Ashby, E., and Anderson, M., "Studies in the Politics of Environmental Protection: The Historical Roots of the British Clean Air Act, 1956: II. The Appeal to Public Opinion over Domestic Smoke, 1880-1892", Interdisciplinary Science Reviews, Vol.2, 1977, pp. 9–26.
- Ashby, E., and Anderson, M., "Studies in the Politics of Environmental Protection: The Historical Roots of the British Clean Air Act, 1956: III. The Ripening of Public Opinion, 1843-53", Interdisciplinary Science Reviews, Vol. 2, 1977, pp. 190–206.
- Beach, Brian, and W. Walker Hanlon. "Coal smoke and mortality in an early industrial economy." Economic Journal 128.615 (2018): 2652-2675. [http://www.walkerhanlon.com/papers/beach_hanlon_draft.pdf online]
- Beck, A., "Some Aspects of the History of Anti-Pollution Legislation in England, 1819-1954," Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences, Vol. 14, 1959, pp. 475–489.
- Bonacina, L.C.W. "London fogs – then and now." Weather (2011), 66: 139-140. https://doi.org/10.1002/wea.790
- Brimblecombe, Peter. The Big Smoke: A History of Air Pollution in London Since Medieval Times (Methuen, 1987).
- Flick, Carlos. "The movement for smoke abatement in 19th-century Britain." Technology and Culture 21.1 (1980): 29-50. [https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/1/article/890603/summary abstract]
- Hamlin, C., "Providence and Putrefaction: Victorian Sanitarians and the Natural Theology of Health and Disease", Victorian Studies, Vol.28, 1985, pp. 381–411.
- Hamlin, C., "Environmental Sensibility in Edinburgh, 1839-1840: The 'Fetid Irrigation' Controversy", Journal of Urban History, Vol.20, 1994, pp. 311–39.
- Hanlon, W. Walker. "Coal smoke, city growth, and the costs of the industrial revolution." Economic Journal 130.626 (2020): 462-488. [https://academic.oup.com/ej/article-pdf/130/626/462/32924071/uez055.pdf online]
- Jenner, M., "The Politics of London Air: John Evelyn’s Fumifugium and the Restoration", Historical Journal, Vol.38, 1995, pp. 535–51.
- Luckin, Bill. “ 'The heart and home of horror': The great London fogs of the late nineteenth century." Social History (2003), 28(1), 31–48. https://doi.org/10.1080/0141987032000040189
- McGuire, Sara Anne. "Noxious Smoke and Silent Killers: Identity, Inequality, Health, and Pollutant Exposure during England's Industrial Revolution" (PhD dissertation, Ohio State University; ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, 2020. 29730285).
- Mosley, Stephen. The Chimney of the World: A History of Smoke Pollution in Victorian and Edwardian Manchester (2013)
- Mosley, Stephen. "Selling the smokeless city: advertising images and smoke abatement in urban-industrial Britain, circa 1840–1960" History and Technology, 32(2), 201–211. https://doi.org/10.1080/07341512.2016.1218956
- Newell, E., "Atmospheric Pollution and the British Copper Industry, 1690-1920," Technology and Culture, Vol.38, 1997, pp. 655–89.
- Pollard, A., "’Sooty Manchester’ and the Social Reform Novel", Journal of Industrial Medicine, Vol.18, 1961, pp. 85–92.
- Rees, R., "The South Wales Copper-Smoke Dispute, 1833-95", Welsh History Review, Vol. 10, 1980–81, pp. 480–496.
- Rees, R., "The Great Copper Trials", History Today (December 1993), pp. 38–44.
- Stradling, David, and Peter Thorsheim. “The Smoke of Great Cities: British and American Efforts to Control Air Pollution, 1860-1914.” Environmental History 4#1 1999, pp. 6–31. {{JSTOR|3985326}}
- Thorsheim, Peter. Inventing Pollution: Coal, Smoke, and Culture in Britain since 1800 (2018) [https://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=AajOxKkjCUYC&oi=fnd&pg=PR9&ots=QeTb5X7KhI&sig=YbtvY7ofVi1lXyyHTeT1h9Diru0 online]
- Wohl, Anthony S. Endangered lives: public health in Victorian Britain (1983) pp. 205–232. [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Smoke_abatement&action=edit§ion=6 online]
=US=
- Barreca, Alan, Karen Clay, and Joel Tarr. "Coal, smoke, and death: bituminous coal and American home heating" . (No. w19881. National Bureau of Economic Research, 2014). [https://www.nber.org/system/files/working_papers/w19881/w19881.pdf online]
- Crenson, Matthew A. The Un-Politics of Air Pollution: A Study of Non-Decisionmaking in the Cities (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1971). [https://archive.org/details/unpoliticsofairp0000cren online]
- Cliff I. Davidson, Cliff I. "Air Pollution In Pittsburgh: A Historical Perspective," Journal of the Air Pollution Control Association (1979) 29:10, 1035–1041, DOI:10.1080/00022470.1979.1047089
- Duffy, John. "Smoke, Smog, and Health in Early Pittsburgh." ''Western Pennsylvania Historical Magazine;; 45 (1962): 93-106. [https://journals.psu.edu/wph/article/view/1924/1772 online]
- Esposito, John C.; Silverman, Larry G.Ralph. Vanishing Air: Nader's Study Group Report on Air Pollution (1970) [https://archive.org/details/vanishingairralp00nade online]
- Grinder. Robert Dale. "The Anti Smoke Crusades. Early attempts to reform the urban environment, 1893-1918" (PhD dissertation, University of Missouri - Columbia; ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, 1973. 74185390)
- Grinder. Robert D. "From Insurgency to Efficiency: The Smoke Abatement Campaign in Pittsburgh before World War I," Western Pennsylvania Historical Magazine 61 (July 1978): 187-202; [https://journals.psu.edu/wph/article/view/3534/3365 online]
- Grinder. Robert D. "The War against St. Louis's Smoke, 1891-1924" Missouri Historical Review 69 (Jan. 1975): 192-94;
- Gugliotta, Angela. " 'Hell with the lid taken off': A cultural history of air pollution–Pittsburgh" (PhD dissertation, U of Notre Dame, 2005). [https://curate.nd.edu/articles/thesis/Hell_With_the_Lid_Taken_Off_A_Cultural_History_of_Air_Pollution_Pittsburgh/24823014/1/files/43662885.pdf online]
- Hays, Samuel. "Clean Air: From the 1970 Act to the 1977 Amendments." Duquesne Law Review. 17 (1978): 33-66. [https://dsc.duq.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2103&context=dlr online]
- Hoy, Suellen M. Chasing dirt : the American pursuit of cleanliness (1995)
- Hoy, Suellen M. Public works history in the United States : a guide to the literature (1982)
- Hoy, Suellen M. " ‘Municipal Housekeeping’: The Role of Women in Improving Urban Sanitation Practices, 1880–1917." in Pollution and Reform in American Cities, 1870–1930 edited by Martin Melosi (1980): 173–176.
- Hurley, Andrew. Environmental inequalities: Class, race, and industrial pollution in Gary, Indiana, 1945-1980 (2985)
- Johnson, James P. The Politics of Soft Coal: The Bituminous Industry from World War I Through the New Deal (U of Illinois Press, 1979).
- Jones, Charles 0. Clean Air: The Policies and Politics of Pollution Control (U of Pittsburgh Press, 1975).
- Kennedy, Harold W., and Andrew 0. Porter. "Air Pollution: Its Control and Abatement." Vanderbilt Law Review 8 (1955): 854-77. [https://scholarship.law.vanderbilt.edu/vlr/vol8/iss4/10/ online]
- Melosi, Martin, ed. Pollution and Reform in American Cities, 1870-1930 (U of Texas Press, 1980).
- Obermeyer, Henry. Stop that smoke! (1933) [https://archive.org/details/stopthatsmoke0000unse online], good popular history
- Platt, Harold L. "Invisible Gases: Smoke, Gender, and the Redefinition of Environmental Policy in Chicago, 1900-1920," Planning Perspectives 10 (Jan 1995Ì: 67-97.
- Platt, Harold L. "Invisible gases: Smoke, gender, and the redefinition of environmental policy in Chicago, 1900–1920". Planning Perspectives 1995, 10(1), 67–97. https://doi.org/10.1080/02665439508725813
- Rome, Adam. "Coming to Terms with Pollution: The Language of Environmental Reform, 1865-1915." Environmental History 1#1 (July 1996): 6-28. {{JSTOR|3985154}}
- Ross, Kristie, James F. Chmiel, and Thomas Ferkol. "The impact of the clean air act." Journal of Pediatrics 161.5 (2012): 781–786. [https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4133758/pdf/nihms604165.pdf online]
- Stradling, David. Smokestacks and Progressives : Environmentalists, Engineers, and Air Quality in America, 1881-1951 (Johns Hopkins UP. 1999); a standard scholarly history. [https://archive.org/details/smokestacksprogr0000stra/page/n6/mode/1up online]
- Stradling, David Stuart. "Civilized air: Coal, smoke, and environmentalism in America, 1880-1920" (PhD dissertation, U of Wisconsin - Madison; ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, 1996. 9635725).
- Stradling, David. "To Breathe Pure Air: Cincinnati's Smoke Abatement Crusade, 1904–1916," Queen City Heritage 55 (Spring 1997): 2-18
- Stradling, David, and Joel Tarr. "Environmental Activism, Locomotive Smoke, and the Corporate Response: The Case of the Pennsylvania Railroad and Chicago Smoke Control," Business History Review 73 (Winter 1999), 677-704 . {{JSTOR|3116130}}
- Stradling, David, and Peter Thorsheim. “The Smoke of Great Cities: British and American Efforts to Control Air Pollution, 1860-1914.” Environmental History 4#1 1999, pp. 6–31. {{JSTOR|3985326}}
- Szymanski, Ann-Marie. “Regulatory Transformations in a Changing City: The Anti-Smoke Movement in Baltimore, 1895-1931.” Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era 13#3 2014, pp. 336–76. {{JSTOR|43903022}}
- Tarr, Joel. "Urban Environmental History,” in Frank Uekoetter (ed.), The Turning Points of Environmental History (U of Pittsburgh Press, 2010), 72-89.
- Uekoetter, Frank. The Age of Smoke: Environmental Policy in Germany and the United States, 1880-1970 (2009)
{{Environmentalism}}
{{Portal bar|Environment|Ecology|Society|Earth sciences|Energy|Politics}}