Margaret Sanger Birth Control Movement

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The Birth Control Movement was one of many social reforms that emerged during the Progressive Era. This movement peaked during the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. This movement pushed for parents to have the ability to manage the size of their families and have the ability prevent unwanted pregnancies. This movement was led by a number of strong female activists, the most essential advocate being nurse Margaret Sanger. As the Birth Control Movement began, Sanger primarily focused on decriminalizing birth control education and devices. She fought laws such as The 1873 Comstock Law, which restricted the dissemination of birth control information and devices by placing them in the same category as pornography. In response to this act Sanger started a reproductive rights journal called The Woman Rebel in 1914, and opened the first birth control clinic in 1916. After discovering the possibility of an oral contraceptive, Sanger asked biologist Gregory Pincus in 1950 to lead the development of a hormonally based birth control pill. Little did Sanger know that this pill would revolutionize female sexuality. What began as a way to simply allow women to have some control over …show more content…

Some women began postponing marriage, and others chose never to marry at all. As a result, female college enrollment continued to increase, “In the 1970s the number of women enrolled in postgraduate studies in such fields as medicine, dentistry, law, and business administration rose sharply as women began to prioritize their career development”(Gale Encyclopedia of U.S. Economic History). By 1998, 36.4 percent of all professionals and 25.1 percent of high-level professionals were women (Gale Encyclopedia of U.S. Economic History). “The pill” revolutionized women’s role in the workplace and provided women with a greater opportunity to pursue education, rather than confined to the role of

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