The 1995 bestseller A Civil Action tells how between 1966 and 1981, several children had died of leukemia in the industrial town of Woburn Massachusetts. Grieving parents in eight families, led by Anne Anderson, were convinced that this tragedy stemmed from pollution of well water either by a local tannery, owned by Beatrice Foods, or by the nearby pharmaceutical plants, Unifirst Corporation and W.R. Grace. In response to their queries, affected wells were closed in 1979. Anderson and her neighbors cooperated with Harvard biostatistician Stephen W. Lagakos who found evidence that affected children had been exposed to more contaminated water than others. The report was covered by the New York Times on 12 February 1984 and published in a statistical journal in 1986 (Lagakos et al 1986).
Frustrated in their attempts to access information, seek compensation, and prevent future deaths, the families convinced the flamboyant lawyer, Jan Schlichtmann, to take on what was thought to be a hopeless cause. Suddenly, the case seemed to promise a multi-million-dollar settlement. Large industrial concerns, as well as government officials, began to pay close attention. Obsessed with the enormity of the apparent crime, the creative Schlichtmann amassed a huge amount of damning evidence through careful and expensive scientific research. But the accused companies also invested large sums in experienced lawyers and scientists who used other data and legal technicalities to refute the charges. The families lost their case in 1986, and Schlichtmann was financially and emotionally ruined. By that time, 21 cases of leukemia had been identified – 4 times the anticipated rate for the population. A public health report found “no significant differences” in exposure between the leukemia cases and controls, yet concluded that “it is not possible to rule out exposure to this water as a factor” (Cutler et al 1986).
Author Jonathan Harr began work on A Civil Action in 1986 before the opening of the trial, and he accompanied Schlichtmann to almost all meetings, relied on court transcripts, and conducted many painstaking interviews with the families and opposing lawyers. The result is an omniscient yet intimate perspective on these true events that reads like an action-packed thriller, complete with dialogue. It won many awards and was on the New York Times bestseller list for 65 weeks. It stands as an interesting commentary on the nature of environmental health and on the American justice system.
Three years later, Steve Zaillian wrote and directed the award-winning film, A Civil Action (1998), based on Harr’s book and starring John Travolta and Robert Duvall. Shlichtmann received $250,000 for the portrayal rights, but is quoted as saying, “John Travolta made more money playing me than I ever did playing me” (Kix 2009). Forty years later, now at age 75, he continues to champion environmental causes, aiming for settlements rather than court cases and recounting his “lessons learned” on the speakers’ circuit.
Woburn and A Civil Action had coincided with other prominent environmental disasters, caused by industrial failures: Three Mile Island (1979), Love Canal (1977-1979), Times Beach, Missouri (1983), Bhopal (1984), to name only a few. The book and the film contributed to rising awareness about the health risks of environmental damage, and they added to increasing skepticism over the intentions of private entrepreneurs and the courts. They also heralded a period that saw a growing body of legislation aimed to define responsibilities and regulate industrial pollution – measures coming, alas all too frequently, after new problems arose and covering jurisdictions defined only by political boundaries, which have nothing to do with the flow of water and air. In 2022, the United Nations declared that a healthy environment is a human right. Dozens of countries, including Canada (2023) and several American states, have enshrined that ideal in law, even if practicalities and protections lag far behind.

Less known is that fact that Woburn triggered a public-health preoccupation with “clusters” and the nature of proof (Alexander et al., 1999; Kingsley et al., 2007) Do clusters indicate important dangers or are they unfortunate but random occurrences? A decade later, the Center for Environmental Health Sciences at Massachusetts Institute of Technology reported on its vain “search for causes” in the industrial toxins of the Woburn leukemia cluster (Durant et al., 1995). In 2002, a controlled study, based on Woburn, failed to establish a causal correlation between disease and contamination; it pointed out that incidence had returned to anticipated levels, while 8 consecutive years had seen no leukemia cases at all (Costas et al., 2002). Woburn has also been cited in efforts to provide better statistical evaluation of “clusters” (Waller, 2000). Woburn prompted recommendations to incorporate qualitative methods into public heath reporting (Brown, 2003) and to recognize the value of citizen science and epistemic differences in lay and professional “ways of knowing” (Brown, 1992; Petteway et al, 2019). Woburn is still being cited in public health assessments of environmental causes of malignancy, often with ambiguous outcomes (Binczewski et al., 2026).
A Civil Action helped prepare the terrain for these many studies with their controls, statistics, and tracking of chemicals–mind you, only those chemicals that are already recognized and detectable. We no longer question the harm in smog and smoking, while improvements in respiratory diseases proclaim the benefits of keeping air clean. It is dismaying that the idea of water pollution as a harm to human health continues to be such a hard sell, while disasters like Flint, Michigan, or Grassy Narrows, Ontario, roil on.
Water degradation is bad for flora, for fauna, and for the planet. Therefore, it is bad for us too. But for industry, the courts, and even some epidemiologists in their many ways of knowing, it remains an unproven hunch.
References
- Alexander, Freda E. 1999. Clusters and clustering of childhood cancer: A review
- European Journal of Epidemiology 15: 847-852.
Binczewski, N.R., Morimoto, L.M., Wiemels, J.L., Richardson, D.B., Bartell. S.M., Metayer, C., Vieira, V.M. 2026. Spatial analysis of residential location at birth, PFAS in public water, and childhood cancers in Southern California (2000-2019). Journal of Exposure Science & Environmental Epidemiology 2026 Mar 5:10.1038/s41370-026-00850-1. doi: 10.1038/s41370-026-00850-1. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 41781477; PMCID: PMC13032745. - Brown, Phil. 1992. Popular epidemiology and toxic waste contamination: lay and professional ways of knowing. Journal of Health & Social Behavior 33(3):267-81.
- Brown, Phil. 2003. Qualitative methods in environmental health research. Environmental Health Perspectives 111(14):1789-98.
- Costas, K., Knorr, R.S., Condon, S.K. 2002. A case-control study of childhood leukemia in Woburn, Massachusetts: the relationship between leukemia incidence and exposure to public drinking water. Science of the Total Environment 300(1-3):23-35.
- Cutler, J.J., Parker, G.S., Rosen, S., Prenney, B., Healey, R., Caldwell, G.G. 1986. Childhood leukemia in Woburn, Massachusetts. Public Health Reports 101(2):201-5.
- Durant, J.L., Chen, J., Hemond, H.F., Thilly, W.G. 1995. Elevated incidence of childhood leukemia in Woburn, Massachusetts: NIEHS Superfund Basic Research Program searches for causes. Environmental Health Perspectives 103 Suppl 6:93-8.
- Kingsley, B.S., Schmeichel, K.L., Rubin, C.H. 2007. An update on cancer cluster activities at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Environmental Health Perspectives 115(1):165-71.
- Kix, Paul. 2009. In the shadow of Woburn, Boston Magazine, City Life, 22 September: https://www.bostonmagazine.com/news/2009/09/22/in-the-shadow-of-woburn
- Lagakos, S. W., Wessen, B. J., Zelen, M. 1986. An analysis of contaminated well water and health effects in Woburn, Massachusetts. Journal of the American Statistical Association 81(395):583–596.
- Petteway, R, Mujahid, M., Allen, A., Morello-Frosch, R. 2019. Towards a people’s social epidemiology: Envisioning a more inclusive and equitable future for social epi research and practice in the 21st century. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 16(20):3983.
- Waller, L.A. 2000. A civil action and statistical assessments of the spatial pattern of disease: do we have a cluster? Regulatory Toxicology & Pharmacology 32(2):174-83.
- Jonathan Harr discusses A Civil Action on C-Span
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