Margaret Sanger

From Conservapedia
This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Progressingamerica (Talk | contribs) at 19:49, December 1, 2016. It may differ significantly from current revision.

Jump to: navigation, search
Margaret Sanger Slee
Margaret Sanger and Charles V. Drysdale cph.3b18067.jpg

Born September 14, 1879
Corning, New York
Died September 6, 1966
Tucson, Arizona[1]
Spouse William Sanger,
James Noah H. Slee[1]

Margaret Sanger (September 14, 1879 - September 6, 1966) was an American feminist and eugenics activist who founded the American Birth Control League. She retired from the organization in 1940 and it eventually became Planned Parenthood. Her main success was in bringing discussions of Birth Control into the public arena. She blamed large families for all of the ills of society,[2] and argued that a major reason to promote birth control was to stop abortions.[3] She was vigorously denounced by the Catholic Church because of her position on birth control.

Early life and family

Sanger was born on September 14, 1879 in Corning, New York as Margaret Louise Higgins[4] to Michael Hennessey Higgins and Anne Purcell Higgins.[5] Her brothers and sisters were: Ethel, Henry, John, Joseph, Lawrence, Mary, Nan, Richard, Robert, and Thomas.[6][7]

Sanger in 1916

Among Sanger's siblings, her brother Robert("Bob") was a well known football player who was elected to the College Football Hall of Fame in 1954.[8] Her sister Ethel Higgins Byrne was a radical feminist activist like Margaret was.[9] When Margaret was nineteen years old, her mother Anne passed away from Tuberculosis at the age of fifty. But Margaret was already at this time blaming all of the problems of the world on overpopulation and large families. At the funeral, she exploded toward her father, blaming him for her death. "You caused this. Mother is dead from having too many children!"[10]

In 1896, she was enrolled in Claverack College and Hudson River Institute by her parents. Her tuition was initially paid for by two of her sisters.[11] As a young adult, Margaret attended nursing school at the White Plains Hospital in New York.[12]

During this time, in 1902, married William Sanger, who was an architect by trade.[13] Together, Margaret and William were active radicals in New York's Greenwich Village scene.[13][14] Bill Sanger was active in the Socialist Party of the Bronx.[15] They had three children together: Grant, Stuart, and Peggy. In 1903, after the birth of their first son, Margaret was diagnosed with Tuberculosis, the disease that had killed her own mother.[16] The Sangers waited five years for Margaret to recover from the disease before having their second and third children. Their daughter Peggy died young at the age of five from pneumonia.[17] Margaret became estranged from William in 1913.[18]

William, who was a radical like Margaret, was arrested in a sting operation for dispersing one of her pamphlets, Family Limitation,[19] for which he spent 30 days in jail. They divorced in 1921.

Margaret Sanger and her two sons Grant and Stuart

A year after her divorce from William Sanger, Margaret remarried to Noah Slee.[20] Like her first husband Bill, J. Noah was also of an activist mindset, helping Margaret achieve her objectives. In 1928, Slee would smuggle diaphragms into New York through Canada[21] in boxes labeled as 3-In-One Oil.[22] He later became the first legal manufacturer of diaphragms in the United States.[23]

Influences

Her father Michael was an atheist and an outspoken Georgist activist. He had read Henry George's work Progress and Poverty and supported the Single Tax movement.[24] The influence of George was so profound in the Higgins family that one of Sanger's brothers was named Henry George McGlynn Higgins. This is significant in not only the obvious Henry George naming, but the second middle name of "McGlynn" is a reference to Edward McGlynn, a popular Catholic priest in New York who was excommunicated for his outspoken support of Georgist ideals.[25]

Her mother Anne had 18 pregnancies, with 11 of them being born.[26] In her autobiography, Sanger recalled that even as a child she blamed big families as the main reason for society's ills. She wrote:

Large families were associated with poverty, toil, unemployment, drunkenness, cruelty, fighting, jails; the small ones with cleanliness, leisure, freedom, light, space, sunshine.

The fathers of the small families owned their homes; the young-looking mothers had time to play croquet with their husbands in the evenings on the smooth lawns. Their clothes had style and charm, and the fragrance of perfume clung about them. They walked hand in hand on shopping expeditions with their children, who seemed positive in their right to live. To me the distinction between happiness and unhappiness in childhood was one of small families and of large families rather than of wealth and poverty.[27]

Sadie Sachs

In her autobiography, Sanger lists the case of Sadie Sachs (a possibly fictional story) as having a deeply profound effect on her outlook.[28] According to the account, Sachs paid to have a backroom abortion for which the doctor botched the procedure. After recovering from an infection, Sachs consulted with the doctor as to how to how to prevent pregnancy and save her own life. The reply from the doctor was presumably that Jake, her husband, should be told to sleep on the roof.[29] Sadie became pregnant shortly after that, attempted to conduct a premature abortion on her own, and shortly died in the presence of Sanger.

Activism

The Woman Rebel in 1914

After several years in Westchester, New York, Margaret and William Sanger's house at Hastings-on-Hudson was destroyed in a fire.[30] After the fire the house was rebuilt, but "A new spirit was awakening within me", and she began her new life as a social activist. When the Sangers moved to New York City, William went looking for work to sustain the family, but Margaret joined several socialist organizations and activities. In 1913 she joined the Women's Committee of the Socialist Party of New York,[31] and would eventually become a committee chair.[32]

Feminism

Sanger argued for woman's liberation from the domination of men. She advocated economic independence and withdrawal from the traditional family unit, particularly marriage. She wrote “No woman can call herself free who does not own and control her body. No woman can call herself free until she can choose consciously whether she will or will not be a mother.” [33] (see self-realization). In 1911-1913, Sanger contributed articles for the New York Call, a socialist daily newspaper. Her columns were titled "What Every Mother Should Know" (1911–12) and "What Every Girl Should Know" (1912–13).[34][35]

Free Speech League

During the time of William and Margaret Sanger's activist phase while living in Greenwich Village, she became involved with the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), befriending socialists, intellectuals, and left wing artists such as Mabel Dodge Luhan, John Reed, Upton Sinclair, and Emma Goldman. She also participated in strikes such as the 1912 Lawrence textile strike and the 1913 Paterson silk strike.[36][37] At the same time, the Greenwich bohemians were beginning to take up the cause of birth control, making them and the Sanger family natural allies.[38] Margaret would become a leader within the self-styled "Free Speech movement".[39]

Emma Goldman, Ezra Heywood, Moses Harman, D. M. Bennett, and other well known radicals of the "Free Speech League", like Margaret Sanger, sought to undermine and overturn the Comstock laws using subversive and demagogic means[40] in addition to their support for the cause of birth control.[41]

Sanger coming out of a courthouse in 1917

After being introduced to important members of the league such as Edward Bliss Foote and Theodore Schroeder, the league helped provide her with future legal assistance. The president of the league, Leonard D. Abbott,[42] and the league's attorney Gilbert E. Roe frequently acted as her lawyers during trial.[43]

In 1914, Sanger proved herself to be a radical's radical. While associated with the Free Speech League, she launched the magazine The Woman Rebel, which she new would provoke anti-obscenity laws such as the Comstock Law due to its (for the time) graphic sexual content.[44] Additionally, the magazine carried the slogan "No gods, no masters", which was a slight change from an IWW slogan: "No God, No Master."[45]

Seeking publicity for her cause, she sent seven issues of the Rebel through the mail before the Post Office finally responded. This led to the magazine being banned - an outcome she sought - and she was subsequently arrested.[46] She eventually was let out on bail. She quickly fled the country and went to England, where she would meet notable Fabian Socialists who helped her refine her craft.

While Sanger was overseas in exile, supportive radicals Emma Goldman and Ben Reitman continued distributing her pamphlet Family Limitation while conducting a nationwide speaking tour.[47]

Birth control

Margaret Sanger and Otto Bobsein coined the term "birth control".[48][49] Before she returned to the States, Sanger was offered a position on the executive committee of the National Birth Control League (NBCL), the first birth control organization in the United States.[50] The NBCL was founded in 1915 by Mary Ware Dennett, Jessie Ashley, and Clara Gruening Stillman.[51]

In October 1916, Sanger opened and (illegally) operated the first birth control clinic in the United States, in Brooklyn, New York. It was raided by the police, and shut down. Sanger was sentenced to 30 days imprisonment for distributing contraceptives, which were illegal at the time.

In 1917, Sanger established the magazine Birth Control Review. In 1921, she founded the organization for which she would become most widely known - the American Birth Control League (ABCL).[52] Two years later, she founded the Clinical Research Bureau (CRB).[53] In 1929, as a result of differences between other leaders of the birth control movement, Sanger resigned her leadership position within the ABCL and assumed full control of the CRB.[54] At the same time, the CRB was renamed to the Birth Control Clinical Research Bureau (BCCRB).

Working with the Urban League in 1929, Sanger opened up the first birth control clinic in Harlem, New York.[55] That same year, Sanger established the National Committee on Federal Legislation for Birth Control as a lobbying organization, in order to influence the creation and amendment of laws pertaining to abortion and birth control.[56] It was closed in 1937, only six months after the court case United States v. One Package of Japanese Pessaries.[57]

Margaret Sanger and Mohandas K. Gandhi

In 1936, Sanger met with Mahatma Gandhi while on a visit to India.[58] During their debate, Gandhi surprised her by rejecting her arguments. Gandhi was of the belief that love becomes lust if it is for the purpose of satisfaction. For Gandhi, men should endeavor to rise above animality and carnal satisfaction. He opposed artificial birth control and preached abstinence.[58]

During her tenure as leader of the birth control movement, Sanger was very adept at gaining the support of wealthy donors. In 1924 and again in 1925, John D. Rockefeller Jr. donated five thousand dollars to the ABCL.[59] Others she frequently associated with were Mary Lasker, who became wealthy from her husband's advertisements in the tobacco industry; Clarence Gamble, heir to the Procter and Gamble company;[60] and Katherine McCormick, heir to the McCormick fortune.

After the resolution of differences a decade earlier, the BCCRB and the ABCL merged in 1938 to form the short-lived Birth Control Federation of America.[61] The organization changed it's name to Planned Parenthood in 1942.

When the organization changed its name to Planned Parenthood, Sanger was very displeased. Even in the smallest degree, it potentially encourages having more children.[62] She wrote:

It irks my very soul and all that is Irish in me to acquiesce to the appeasement group that is so prevalent in our beloved organization.

She believed that some people should be 100% barred from procreation of any kind, rather than limited encouragement that could produce the wrong kind of people, if, albeit, less of them.[63] She said as much, in a video that surfaced in 2014 from a 1947 One Minute News interview she was in with John Parsons of British Pathé. In the footage, she called for a 10 year ban on babies, insisting that it is both practical and humane.[64][65][66] She again made similar comments in 1957 in an interview with Mike Wallace of ABC. Wallace asked her if she believed in the existence of sin and her response was that "I think the greatest sin in the world is bringing children into the world" - and after a few second uncomfortable pause she said "that have disease from their parents, that have no chance in the world to be a human being practically. Delinquents, prisoners, all sorts of things, just marked when they’re born. That, to me, is the greatest sin that people can commit."[67]

During the 1950's, Sanger worked with Katharine McCormick to fund the research being conducted by Gregory Pincus to develop The pill. A few years later, Enovid was the first birth control formulation submitted for FDA approval.[68]

Over time, Sanger increasingly wanted to work on an international level. Sanger worked to spread her work in Japan, through her contact with Shidzue Katō.[69] She made an impact in China, working with Pearl Buck to establish a clinic in Shanghai.[70] And in 1953, she established in India the International Planned Parenthood Committee, which would become the International Planned Parenthood Federation (IPPF).[71] C. P. Blacker, a prominent eugenist, was the first administrative chairman of the IPPF.[72]

Overpopulation

For a more detailed treatment, see Malthusianism.

Sanger was a believer in the doctrines of Robert Malthus, and early on, this caused problems for her newly formed magazine.[73] She frequently wrote that too much population was the cause of unemployment, poverty, crime, and war, and she would often issue challenges to people to provide realistic solutions to overpopulation.[74]

In 1925, she organized the Sixth International Neo-Malthusian and Birth-Control Conference together with the American Birth Control League.[75][76] In 1927, encouraged by George Bernard Shaw and H. G. Wells,[77] she organized the first World Population Conference in Geneva.[78]

Sanger frequently wrote about morons, the feeble-minded, idiots, defectives, and others

Eugenics and race

Margaret Sanger campaigned for eugenic controls to enforce what she called "race hygiene" and was a member of the American Eugenics Society and the English Eugenics Society.[79][80][81]

Many modern ideas of the substandard morals and inferiority of particular races are echoed in Sanger's writings. She wrote in one of her "What Every Girl Should Know" commentaries, that aboriginal Australians are in her opinion "the lowest known species of the human family, just a step higher than the chimpanzee in brain development," and that they possess "so little sexual control that police authority alone prevents him from obtaining sexual satisfaction on the streets." She compared these aborigines to "normal man and Woman" who have demonstrated control over their sexual desires.[82] She had a very deep hatred for other races that demonstrated a greater fecundity, such as the Chinese and the aborigines.

Additionally, she wrote about the failure of traditional ethics in sexuality that "... have in the past revealed their woeful inability to prevent the sexual and racial chaos into which the world has today drifted."[83]

Margaret Sanger associated with racists[84] and in 1926, she was the guest speaker at a Ku Klux Klan rally in Silverlake, New Jersey.[85]

Death and legacy

Sanger died in Tucson, Arizona on September 6, 1966,[1] of complications from congestive heart failure.[86] She was 86 years old.[87] She is buried in the prestigious Green-Wood Cemetery in Sunset Park, Brooklyn.[88]

Planned Parenthood annually gives awards to those who support them and the top award they give is called The Margaret Sanger Award.[89][90] Alan Guttmacher, who was a President of Planned Parenthood from 1962 to 1974 and who was also former Vice-President of the American Eugenics Society,[91][92] stated: "We are merely walking down the path that Ms. Sanger has carved out for us." [93][94] Similarly, Faye Wattleton, who was the president of Planned Parenthood until 1992, stated that she was "proud" to be "walking in the footsteps" of Margaret Sanger.[94] In 1960, Sanger was nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize.[95]

Sanger SI.jpg

Dr. William Moulton Marston developed the character Wonder Woman through his inspiration of Sanger.[96]

A request was sent to the Smithsonian Institution for a bust of Sanger currently on display in a "Struggle for Justice" exhibit. The bust was a gift of Cordelia Scaife May.[97] The request, led by a group of black pastors, noted that Sanger has previously spoke in front of the KKK, as well as a long line of racist viewpoints.[98][99][100] One reason the Smithsonian refused the request was because of her role in Women's rights. The pastors noted that it would make more sense to place the bust in an exhibit together with "with busts of Pharaoh, Herod, Hitler, Stalin, Mao Zedong, Goebbels, Pol Pot, and Dr. Mengle," in order to "put her in proper historical context with the infamous and evil figures who committed genocide."[101]

Quotes

Margaret Sanger in 1961
  • "The most merciful thing that the large family does to one of its infant members is to kill it." [102]
  • "All of our problems are the result of overbreeding among the working class, and if morality is to mean anything at all to us, we must regard all the changes which tend toward the uplift and survival of the human race as moral." [2]
  • "Those least fit to carry on the race are increasing most rapidly. People who cannot support their own offspring are encouraged by Church and State to produce large families. Many of the children thus begotten are diseased or feebleminded; many become criminals. The burden of supporting these unwanted types has to be borne by the healthy elements of the nation. Funds that should be used to raise the standard of our civilization are diverted to the maintenance of those who should never have been born." - Statement of the American Birth Control League[103]
  • "The mass of significant Negroes, particularly in the South, still breed carelessly and disastrously, with the result that the increase among Negroes, even more than among whites, is [in] that portion of the population least intelligent and fit and least able to rear children properly." - Margaret Sanger - The "Negro Project" quoting W.E.B. DuBois with the omission of one word [104]
  • "Always to me any aroused group was a good group, and therefore I accepted an invitation to talk to the women's branch of the Ku Klux Klan at Silver Lake, New Jersey, one of the weirdest experiences I had in lecturing."[105][106]
  • "Before eugenists and others who are laboring for racial betterment can succeed, they must first clear the way for Birth Control. Like the advocates of Birth Control, the eugenists, for instance, are seeking to assist the race toward the elimination of the unfit. Both are seeking a single end but they lay emphasis upon different methods."[107][108]
  • "Organized charity is itself the symptom of a malignant social disease. Those vast complex, interrelated organizations aiming to control and to diminish the spread of misery and destitution and all the menacing evils that spring out of this sinisterly fertile soil, are the surest sign that our civilization has bred, is breeding and is perpetuating constantly increasing numbers of defectives, delinquents and dependents. My criticism therefore, is not directed at the ‘failure’ of philanthropy, but rather at its success" - Margaret Sanger, The Pivot of Civilization [NY: Brentano's, 1922], (p. 108).[109]
  • "To each group we explained what contraception was; that abortion was the wrong way—no matter how early it was performed it was taking life; that contraception was the better way, the safer way—it took a little time, a little trouble, but was well worth while in the long run, because life had not yet begun."[110]
  • "Of all lands China needed knowledge of how to control her numbers; the incessant fertility of her millions spread like a plague. Well-wishing foreigners who had gone there with their own moral codes to save her babies from infanticide, her people from pestilence, had actually increased her problem. To contribute to famine funds and the support of missions was like trying to sweep back the sea with a broom." [111]
  • "The lack of balance between the birth of the "unfit" and the "fit," admittedly greatest present menace to civilization, never be rectified by the inauguration of cradle competition between these two classes. The example of the inferior classes, the fertility of the feeble-minded, the mentally defective, the poverty-stricken, should not be held up emulation to the mentally and physically fit, and therefore less fertile, parents of the educated and well-to-do-classes. On the contrary, the most urgent problem today is how to limit and discourage the over fertility of the mentally and physically defective. Possibly drastic and Spartan methods may be forced upon American society if it continues complacently to encourage the chance and chaotic breeding that has resulted from our stupid, cruel sentimentalism."[112]
  • "Our whole philosophy is, in fact, based upon the fundamental assumption that man is a self-conscious, self-governing creature, that he should not be treated as a domestic animal; that he must be left free, at least within certain wide limits, to follow his own wishes in the matter of mating and in the procreation of children. Nor do we believe that the community could or should send to the lethal chamber the defective progeny resulting from irresponsible and unintelligent breeding." [113]
  • "Birth control is not contraception indiscriminately and thoughtlessly practiced. It means the release and cultivation of the better racial elements in our society, and the gradual suppression, elimination and eventual extirpation of defective stocks - those human weeds which threaten the blooming of the finest flowers of American civilization."[114]
  • "Just think for a moment of the meaning of the word kindergarten--a garden of children! To me, that is just what the world ought to be--a garden of children. In this matter we should not do less than follow the example of the professional gardener. Every expert gardener knows that the individual plant must be properly spaced, rooted in a rich nourishing soil, and provided with sufficient air and sunlight. He knows that no plant would have a fair chance of life if it were overcrowded or choked by weeds. To grow into maturity, to bud, to blossom, to produce beautiful sturdy flowers in its own season, each plant must have constant attention, incessant care and tender devotion. If plants, and livestock as well, require space and air, sunlight and love, children need them even more. The only real wealth of our country lies in the men and women of the next generation. A farmer would rather produce a thousand thoroughbreds than a million runts. How are we to breed a race of human thoroughbreds unless we follow the same plan? We must make this country into a garden for children instead of a disorderly back lot overrun with human weeds. In a home where there are too many children in proportion to the living space, the air and sunlight, the children are usually overcrowded and underfed. They are a constant burden on their mother's overtaxed strength and the father's earning capacity. Such homes cannot be gardens in any sense of the word."[115]
  • In Margaret Sanger's book The Pivot of Civilization she also called for the elimination of "human weeds," for the segregation of "morons, misfits, and maladjusted," and for the sterilization of "genetically inferior races." [116]

In her book The Case for Birth Control, quoting approvingly of Havelock Ellis:[117]

  • "If it were necessary to choose between the task of getting children educated and the task of getting them well born and healthy, it would be better to abandon education."

Works

Margaret-sanger-flyer.gif
  • What Every Mother Should Know, (1911)
  • Family Limitation, (1914)
  • What Every Girl Should Know, (1916)
  • The Case for Birth Control: A Supplementary Brief and Statement of Facts, (1917)
  • Woman and the New Race, (1920)
  • Debate on Birth Control, (1921)
  • The Pivot of Civilization, (1922)
  • Motherhood in Bondage, (1928)
  • My Fight for Birth Control, (1931)
  • An Autobiography, (1938)

Sources

  • Douglas, Emily Taft (1970), Margaret Sanger; Pioneer of the Future, New York, NY: Holt, Rinehart & Winston
  • Peterson, Jefferis Kent (2007), Abortion - A Liberal Cause?, Erik Rauch (MIT) Retrieved on 2007-07-25
  • Sanger, Margaret (1920), Women and the New Race, New York, NY: Truth Publishing Company Facsimile retrieved on 2007-07-24

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Margaret Sanger Is Dead at 82; Led Campaign for Birth Control
  2. 2.0 2.1 MORALITY AND BIRTH CONTROL
  3. BIRTH CONTROL OR ABORTION?,
  4. Margaret Sanger
  5. A to Z of American Women Leaders and Activists
  6. Woman of Valor: Margaret Sanger and the Birth Control Movement in America
  7. Margaret Sanger: A Life of Passion
  8. Robert A. "Bob, The Hig" Higgins
  9. Dorothy Day: Champion of the Poor
  10. Their Angry Creed: The shocking history of feminism, and how it is destroying our way of life
  11. Margaret Sanger
  12. Margaret Sanger, Nancy Whitelaw
  13. 13.0 13.1 Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report: MMWR, Volume 48, Issues 25-52
  14. People & Events: Greenwich Village Intellectuals in the Early 20th Century
  15. Margaret Sanger: A Life of Passion
  16. Encyclopedia of Birth Control
  17. Margaret Sanger: A Life of Passion
  18. Public Health: The Development of a Discipline, Volume 1
  19. Birth Control in America: The Career of Margaret Sanger
  20. The Encyclopedia of New York State
  21. Woman of Valor: Margaret Sanger and the Birth Control Movement in America
  22. Thinking Out Loud: On the Personal, the Political, the Public and the Private
  23. Margaret Sanger - 20th Century Hero, p. 8, Planned Parenthood
  24. Margaret Sanger: A Life of Passion
  25. Henry George Dr. Edward McGlynn & Pope Leo XIII
  26. Women Criminals: An Encyclopedia of People and Issues (2 volumes): An Encyclopedia of People and Issues
  27. The Autobiography of Margaret Sanger, Margaret Sanger
  28. Birth Control in America: The Career of Margaret Sanger
  29. Sterilized by the State: Eugenics, Race, and the Population Scare in Twentieth-Century North America
  30. Margaret Sanger: A Life of Passion
  31. Contraception: A History
  32. To Be Young Was Very Heaven: Women in New York Before the First World War
  33. II. Women’s Struggle for Freedom
  34. What Every Mother Should Know: Or How Six Little Children Were Taught the Truth.
  35. What Every Girl Should Know
  36. CQ Press Guide to Radical Politics in the United States
  37. The Paterson Strike, by Margaret H. Sanger
  38. Freedom of Speech: Rights and Liberties Under the Law
  39. The Cambridge Companion to Modern American Culture
  40. CQ Press Guide to Radical Politics in the United States
  41. Pioneers of Birth Control in England and America, American Propagandists
  42. The Twentieth Century Magazine, Volume 4, 1911
  43. Free Speech in Its Forgotten Years, 1870-1920
  44. Written by Herself: Volume I: Autobiographies of American Women: An Anthology
  45. Women's Periodicals in the United States: Social and Political Issues
  46. Margaret Sanger (1879–1966)
  47. Emma Goldman: Anarchist Woman
  48. Woman of Valor: Margaret Sanger and the Birth Control Movement in America
  49. The Pivot of Civilization in Historical Perspective: The Birth Control Classic
  50. Birth Control in America: The Career of Margaret Sanger
  51. Once Upon a Pedestal
  52. Social Issues in America: An Encyclopedia
  53. Broadcasting Birth Control: Mass Media and Family Planning
  54. The Progressive Era's Health Reform Movement: A Historical Dictionary
  55. Women and Health in America: Historical Readings
  56. Life, Death and the Law: Law and Christian Morals in England and the United States
  57. Lobbying for Birth Control
  58. 58.0 58.1 The Cultural Construction of Sexuality
  59. Cannot Be Silenced
  60. Margaret Sanger: A Life of Passion
  61. Gender and Women's Leadership: A Reference Handbook, Volume 1
  62. The Birth Control Movement and American Society: From Private Vice to Public Virtue
  63. The Birth Control Movement and American Society: From Private Vice to Public Virtue, See footnote 49
  64. Shocking new footage found of Planned Parenthood founder Margaret Sanger saying "no more babies", Live Action
  65. Ban on Babies is All Wet, Cry Angry Britons, Chicago Tribune
  66. "No More Babies!" - Expert Calls For Ban on Childbirth (1947), British Pathé
  67. Planned Parenthood Founder: 'Greatest Sin...is Bringing Children Into the World That Have Disease', CNSNews.com
  68. Timeline: The Pill, PBS
  69. Facing Two Ways: The Story of My Life
  70. Profiles in Humanity: The Battle for Peace, Freedom, Equality, and Human Rights
  71. Margaret Sanger's Eugenic Legacy: The Control of Female Fertility
  72. Eugenics, Literature, and Culture in Post-war Britain
  73. Margaret Sanger
  74. Margaret Sanger
  75. Margaret Sanger's Eugenic Legacy: The Control of Female Fertility
  76. The Correspondence of W. E. B. Du Bois: Selections, 1877-1934
  77. The Feminist Revolution: A Story of the Three Most Inspiring and Empowering Women in American History: Susan B. Anthony, Margaret Sanger, and Betty Friedan
  78. The State and the Stork: The Population Debate and Policy Making in US History
  79. http://www.all.org/abac/contents.txt
  80. http://www.lifeadvocate.org/1_98/feature.htm
  81. Angry White Female: Margaret Sanger's Race of Thoroughbreds
  82. What Every Girl Should Know, Sexual Impulse - Part II
  83. Birth Control Review, Volume 5, The Eugenic Value of Birth Control Propaganda
  84. Peterson 2007
  85. Peterson 2007 citing Douglas 1970, p. 192
  86. Margaret Sanger 1879 - 1966, The founder of the birth-control movement in the United States
  87. Margaret Sanger Is Dead at 82; Led Campaign for Birth Control, The New York Times
  88. The Graveyard Shift: A Family Historian's Guide to New York City Cemeteries
  89. Allan Rosenfield Receives the Reproductive Rights Movement's Highest Honor - Planned Parenthood Federation of America's Margaret Sanger Award
  90. PPFA Margaret Sanger Award Winners
  91. What is Roe v. Wade?
  92. Eugenics Watch
  93. What the Facts Reveal About Planned Parenthood
  94. 94.0 94.1 The Inherent Racism of Population Control By Paul Jalsevac
  95. Nomination Database
  96. The Man Behind Wonder Woman Was Inspired By Both Suffragists And Centerfolds
  97. NPG.72.70
  98. Smithsonian Refuses Request from Black Pastors to Remove Bust of Eugenicist Planned Parenthood Founder
  99. Smithsonian Refuses to Remove Margaret Sanger Statue: We Don’t Care She Was a Eugenicist, LifeNews.com
  100. Conservatives Want Bust of Planned Parenthood Founder Removed From National Portrait Gallery, Time magazine
  101. Smithsonian Won't Remove Bust of Margaret Sanger, Christian Broadcasting Network
  102. Sanger 1920, p. 63, see also Transcript.
  103. Birth Control: What it Is, how it Works, what it Will Do
  104. http://www.jstor.org/view/00147354/di975884/97p14282/1?frame=noframe&userID=80cdbf34@buffalo.edu/01cce4406300501bbf062&dpi=3&config=jstor
  105. Klanned Parenthood, Snopes.com
  106. The Autobiography of Margaret Sanger, p. 366
  107. Eugenics, Race, and Margaret Sanger Revisited: Reproductive Freedom for All?
  108. Birth Control and Racial Betterment, by Margaret Sanger
  109. http://www.worldwideschool.org/library/books/socl/socialconcerns/ThePivotofCivilization/chap6.html
  110. Margaret Sanger, An Autobiography (1938) p. 217 online
  111. The Autobiography of Margaret Sanger, p. 347
  112. The Pivot of Civilization, p. 25
  113. The Pivot of Civilization, p. 100
  114. APOSTLE OF BIRTH CONTROL SEES CAUSE GAINING HERE; Hearing in Albany on Bill to Legalize Practice a Milestone in Long Fight of Margaret Sanger -- Even China Awakening to Need of Selective Methods, She Says., The New York Times
  115. The Meaning of Radio Birth Control, April 1924
  116. Who Was Margaret Sanger
  117. The Case for Birth Control, by Margaret Sanger, p. 94

External links