
Margaret Sanger
Who dared to utter the unthinkable in an era of oppression...
Margaret Louise Higgins was born on September 14,
1879 in Corning, New York to Michael Hennessey Higgins, an
Irish-born stonemason with iconoclastic ideas, and Anne Purcell
Higgins, a devoutly Catholic Irish-American. When Anne Higgins
died from tuberculosis at the age of fifty, her daughter, Margaret, the
sixth of eleven children, blamed her mother's premature death not
just on the family's poverty, but on her mother's frequent
pregnancies. Margaret Higgins sought to escape what she viewed as
a grim class and family heritage and, with the help of her older
sisters, attended Claverack College and Hudson River Institute and
then entered the nursing program at White Plains Hospital. In 1902,
just months before completing the program, she met and married
architect William Sanger. Margaret Sanger and her husband had
three children and the family settled in Hastings, a Westchester
County suburb of New York City.
Suburban life, however, did not satisfy the Sangers. By 1910 the
family moved to New York City. William Sanger wanted to give up his work as a draftsman to try his hand
at painting, while Margaret Sanger returned to nursing to help support the family. The Sangers also became
immersed in the pre-war radical bohemian culture flourishing in pre-war Greenwich Village. They joined a
circle of intellectuals, activists, and artists that included Max Eastman, John Reed, Upton Sinclair, Mabel
Dodge and Emma Goldman. Margaret Sanger became a member of the Liberal Club and a supporter of the
anarchist-run Ferrer Center and Modern School. She also joined the Women's Committee of the NY
Socialist Party, and took part in labor actions led by the Industrial Workers of the World, including the
1912 strike at Lawrence, MA and the 1913 strike at Paterson, NJ.
Margaret Sanger's work as a visiting nurse focused her interest in sex education and women's health. In
1912 she began writing a column on sex education for the New York Call entitled "What Every Girl Should
Know." This experience led to her first battle with censors, who ruled that her column on venereal disease
was indecent and suppressed it. Increasingly, it was the issue of family limitation that attracted Sanger's
attention as she worked with poor women in New York's Lower East Side suffering the pain of frequent
childbirth, miscarriage and abortion. Influenced by the ideas of anarchist Emma Goldman, Sanger began to
argue for the need for family limitation as a tool by which working-class women would liberate themselves
from the economic burden of unwanted pregnancy.
Shocked by the inability of most women to obtain accurate and effective birth control, which she believed
was fundamental to securing freedom and independence for working women, Sanger began challenging the
1873 federal Comstock law and the various state "little Comstock" laws that banned the dissemination of
contraceptive information. In March 1914, Sanger published the first issue of The Woman Rebel, a radical
feminist monthly that advocated militant feminism, including the right to practice birth control. For advocating
the use of contraception, three issues of The Woman Rebel were banned and in August 1914 Sanger was
eventually indicted for violating postal obscenity laws. Unwilling to risk a lengthy imprisonment for breaking
federal laws, Sanger jumped bail in October and using the alias "Bertha Watson" set sail for England. En
route, she ordered friends to release 100,000 copies of Family Limitation, a 16-page pamphlet which
provided explicit instructions on the use of a variety of contraceptive methods.
On arrival in England, Margaret Sanger contacted a number of
British radicals, feminists, and neo-Malthusians whose social and
economic theories helped Sanger develop broader justifications for
the use of birth control. She was also deeply influenced by
psychologist Havelock Ellis and the theories on the importance of
female sexuality. Sanger now expanded broadened her arguments for
birth control on the grounds that it would fulfill a critical psychological
need by enabling women to fully enjoy sexual relations, free from the
fear of pregnancy.
In 1915 William Sanger was jailed for 30 days for distributing a copy
of Family Limitation Shortly after, in October of that year Margaret
Sanger, keen to focus media attention on her trial and generate
favorable public support, returned to New York to face The
Woman Rebel charges. When her only daughter, five-year old
Peggy, died suddenly in November, sympathetic publicity convinced
the government not to proceed with Sanger's prosecution. Denied the forum of a public trial, Sanger
embarked on a nationwide tour to promote birth control. Arrested in several cities, her confrontational style
attracted even greater publicity for herself and the cause of birth control.
Although in 1914 Sanger had been promoting woman-controlled contraceptives such as suppositories or
douches, a 1915 visit to a Dutch birth control clinic convinced her that a new more flexible diaphragm,
carefully fitted by medically trained staff, was the most effective contraceptive device. After returning from a
national tour in 1916, Sanger opened the nation's first birth control clinic in Brownsville, Brooklyn. On
October 24, 1916, after only nine days in operation, the clinic was raided and Sanger and her staff were
arrested. Sanger was convicted and spent thirty days in prison. However, the publicity surrounding the
Brownsville Clinic also provided Sanger with a base of wealthy supporters from which she began to build
an organized movement for birth control reform. Sanger appealed the decision and although her conviction
was upheld, the New York State appellate court exempted physicians from the law prohibiting
dissemination of contraceptive information to women if prescribed for medical reasons. This loophole
allowed Sanger the opportunity to open a legal doctor-run birth control clinic in 1923. Staffed by female
doctors and social workers, the Birth Control Clinical Research Bureau served as a model for the
establishment of other clinics, and became a center for the collection of critical clinical data on the
effectiveness of contraceptives.
Sanger separated from her husband, William, in 1914, and in keeping with her private views on sexual
liberation, she began a series of affairs with several men, including Havelock Ellis and H.G. Wells. In 1922,
she married oil magnate James Noah H. Slee, but did so on her own terms, insuring her independence both
financially and in sexual terms. Slee, who died in 1943, became the main funder of the birth control
movement.
With the suppression of the radical left after World War I, Sanger decided to expand support for birth
control by promoting birth control on the basis of medical and public health needs. In 1917 she established
a new monthly, the Birth Control Review and in 1921 she embarked on a campaign of education and
publicity designed to win mainstream support for birth control by opening the American Birth Control
League. She focused many of her efforts on gainig support from the medical profession, social workers, and
the liberal wing of the eugenics movement. She increasingly rationalized birth control as a means of reducing
genetically transmitted mental or physical defects, and at times supported sterilization for the mentally
incompetent. While she did not advocate efforts to limit population growth solely on the basis of class,
ethnicity or race, and refused to encourage positive race-based eugenics, Sanger's reputation was
permanently tainted by her association with the reactionary wing of the eugenics movement.
In 1929 Sanger formed the National Committee on Federal Legislation for Birth Control to lobby for birth
control legislation that granted physicians the right to legally disseminate contraceptives. However, most
doctors remained hostile to birth control. In addition, Sanger faced strenuous opposition from the Catholic
Church. In the end, her legislative campaigns and efforts to secure government support for birth control
failed. Sanger did, however, succeed in the courts when in 1936, the U.S. Court of Appeals ruled that
physicians were exempt from the Comstock Law's ban on the importation of birth control materials. This
decision, in effect, gave doctors the right to prescribe or distribute contraceptives (though the ban on
importing contraceptive devices for personal use was not lifted until 1971).
By the late 1920's, Sanger's efforts to broaden support for birth control changed the movement's focus
away from radical feminism toward more conservative mainstream middle-class values. Increasingly Sanger
herself was viewed as too radical for the movement she had launched. In 1928 she angrily resigned as
president of the American Birth Control League and Sanger's leadership in the movement was increasingly
eclipsed. By 1939, with the merger of the American Birth Control League and the Birth Control Clinical
Research Bureau into the Birth Control Federation of America (later renamed Planned Parenthood
Federation of America) Sanger's role in the birth control movement became largely honorific. By 1942,
Sanger was living in Tucson, Arizona and had retired from active participation in the movement.
World War II refocused Sanger's attention on international aspects of the birth
control movement. She had travelled extensively in the early 1920's and 1930's
to lecture on birth control in Asia and Europe. In 1930 she organized the Birth
Control International Information Centre with British feminist Edith How-Martyn
to serve as a clearinghouse for information. By the end of the war, growing alarm
over the consequences of population growth, particularly in the Third World,
renewed interest in efforts to build an international birth control movement,
propelling Margaret Sanger out of retirement. Working with family planning
leaders in Europe and Asia, she helped found the International Planned
Parenthood Federation (IPPF) in 1952 and served as its first president until
1959. At her returement, the IPPF was the largest private international
organization devoted to promoting family planning.
Through all her work for birth control, Sanger was consistent in her search for simpler, less costly, and more
effective contraceptives. Not only did she help arrange for the American manufacture of the Dutch-based
spring-form diaphragms she had been smuggling in from Europe, but in subsequent years she fostered a
variety of research efforts to develop spermicidal jellies, foam powders, and hormonal contraceptives.
Finally in the 1950s, her role in helping to find critical research funding made possible the development of
the first effective anovulant contraceptive -- the birth control pill.
In 1965 the Supreme Court's Griswold v. Connecticut decision made birth control legal for married
couples. Only a few months later, on September 6, 1966, Margaret Sanger, the founder of the birth control
movement, died in a Tucson nursing home at the age of 87.
Links to other sites on the Web
Return to Front Page
Margaret Sangers Papers Project: Home Page
Planned Parenthood which Sanger founded.
Margaret Sanger of the Twenties
© 1997 wendyt@ucla.edu
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