factories were not isolated in the countryside; they were in the middle of a busy city with a long tradition of close attention to public health. In May of 1863, a chemist who worked for the city of Basel, Friedrich Goppelsröder, inspected the two Müller-Pack factories, as well as Alexander Clavel’s, and concluded that working conditions were dangerous and the disposal practices unsanitary. (Goppelsröder did not tell the companies in advance that he was coming—a sharp contrast to what would happen more than a century later in Toms River.) Nine months after Goppelsröder’s inspections, the city council ordered Müller-Pack to stop dumping into the canal and banned Clavel from making any aniline dyes at all. Clavel ignored the order for a while and then built a new factory (still used by Ciba almost 150 years later) that was outside the city limits and, most importantly, next to the Rhine. As an official company history put it,“The immediate proximity of the river as a direct outlet for effluents and also for the disposal of rubbish had become a vital necessity of colour manufacture.” 12 But when Müller-Pack, stuck inside the city limits, proposed discharging his factory’s waste into a tributary of the Rhine, the city rejected his idea because the tributary was too dry. Desperate to resume full production, he then suggested putting all of his waste in barrels and emptying them directly into the river. This scheme, too, was rejected.
By then, Müller-Pack had even bigger problems: His waste was making some of his factory’s neighbors seriously ill. The citizens of Basel got their water from shallow wells, and some of those wells were very close to a factory where Müller-Pack had been dumping waste into an unlined lagoon for two years. In 1863, a railway worker became sick after drinking contaminated water from a nearby well. The following year, a gardener and maid who worked in a home next to the plant fell ill after drinking tea made from water pumped from a tainted well. The owner of the home was a wealthy man, and he summoned Goppelsröder to investigate. The chemist analyzed the well water and reported to city health officials that arsenic levels were “so high that the water must be designated as poisoned, which thus clearly explains the attacks of vomiting, etc.” 13 He also noticed that the water was yellowish and had an “indefinable, peculiar, and somewhat repulsive odor”—one that was indisputably awful but difficult to describe (similarly vague terms would be used a century later in Toms River). Goppelsröder then tested the factory’s lagoon and soil and even the sediment at the bottom of a nearby canal, finding contamination everywhere he looked. Based on his report, the city in 1864 ordered the older Müller-Pack plant closed. The city also sued Müller-Pack on behalf of the poison victims (by then there were seven). In March of 1865, after eight months in court, he was found guilty of gross negligence. Müller-Pack was ordered to pay a large fine and compensate the victims as well as nearby landowners for the loss of their property values. He even had to deliver clean drinking water to the neighborhood. The humiliation and expense were too much to bear, so a few months after the guilty verdict, he moved to Paris.
Aniline dyes were still a booming business, however, and theGeigys, as the landowners, were not about to let Müller-Pack’s factories sit idle. They took over dye production, and soon Johann Rudolf Geigy-Merian convinced the city to let him deal with the waste by building a pipeline, six thousand feet long, to the Rhine. When the pipeline proved inadequate, Geigy workers began to make clandestine nighttime visits to Basel’s Middle Bridge to dump barrels of waste into the fast-moving current in the center of the river. 14 Since the Rhine flowed north and Basel was a border city, Geigy’s waste, and Clavel’s, too, became Germany’s problem, not Switzerland’s. From that