Specifically:
In 1950, the death rate from lung cancer among white women was 4.9, but it climbed to 32.1 in 1990.
For black women, the lung cancer death rate soared from 3.8 to 32.
75.6 of every 100,000 men and 31.8 of every100,000 women died of lung cancer in 1990
"The continued increase in lung cancer death rates primarily reflect spatterns of cigarette smoking throughout this century," the CDC reported.
Smoking among white American men, for example, peaked at about 67 percent in the 1940s and 1950s.
Smoking among women peaked at about 44 percent in the1960s.
Female Lung Cancer Death Rates.
Deaths per 100,000 Women:
Smokefree Smoker
1960-64 11.7 23.9
1965-68 12.7 36.5
1969-72 12.2 54.1
1982-86 12.1 130.4
--from Smokefree Educational Services
--note that the years' segments vary.