Today would have been Karen Silkwood’s birthday. In November 1974, she left her apartment in Crescent, Oklahoma, carrying documents she believed needed to be seen outside the Kerr-McGee plutonium plant where she worked.
Silkwood was a lab technician and union member who had begun documenting safety concerns inside the facility. She kept detailed notes about contamination incidents and equipment issues that, in her view, did not match official reports. Over time, those notes became more than internal complaints.
With each new detail she became more aware that the information she was gathering was turning into something she needed to share with the right people outside the plant. She chose to bring all the information she'd gathered to New York Times reporter David Burnham, who had been covering nuclear safety concerns throughout the industry. Silkwood arranged to meet him in Oklahoma City, believing he could carry the information to a larger audience.
She never arrived.
Late on November 13, 1974, her white Honda was found off Highway 74. The Oklahoma State Highway Patrol concluded she had fallen asleep at the wheel and struck a concrete culvert. That determination became the official record.
In 1983, the film Silkwood brought her story to a national audience, with Meryl Streep portraying Karen Silkwood, Cher appearing as her close friend Dolly Pelliker, and Kurt Russell playing her boyfriend Drew Stephens. The performances introduced the case to a generation that had not followed the original story in the 1970s, myself included.
As for what happened with Karen's case, the Highway Patrol’s conclusion remains the "formal finding", but for years questions about the missing envelope she was said to be carrying and the circumstances of her drive to Oklahoma City have continued to raise questions. Although more than five decades have passed, the details surrounding what happened to Karen on that November night in 1974 remain a mystery.
Karen Silkwood
Feb 19, 1946 – Nov 13, 1974
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