Margaret Sanger: Difference between revisions

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{{Infobox politician|image_size=200|birthname=Margaret Louise Higgins|birth_date=September 14, 1879|birth_place=Corning, [[State of New York|New York]], [[United States of America|United States]]|death_date=September 6, 1966|death_place=Tucson, [[Arizona]], United States|political_orientation=[[Liberal feminism]]|image=Margaret Sanger.png}}
{{Infobox politician|image_size=200|birth_name=Margaret Louise Higgins|birth_date=September 14, 1879|birth_place=Corning, [[State of New York|New York]], [[United States of America|United States]]|death_date=September 6, 1966|death_place=Tucson, [[Arizona]], United States|political_orientation=[[Liberal feminism]]|image=Margaret Sanger.png}}


'''Margaret Higgins Sanger''' (September 14, 1879 – September 6, 1966) was a Statesian birth control activist. She opened the USA's first birth control clinic in 1916, which authorities shut down ten days later. She was initially a member of the [[Socialist Party of America|Socialist Party]] and supporter of the [[Industrial Workers of the World|IWW]] but moved to the right in the 1920s and joined the [[eugenics]] movement.<ref>{{Web citation|author=Donna Goodman|newspaper=[[Liberation School]]|title=Women’s struggle for suffrage and liberation: The road to legal equality|date=2022-03-08|url=https://www.liberationschool.org/womens-movement-1910-1940/|retrieved=2023-08-12}}</ref> In 1939, she began the Negro Project to prevent the Black population from growing in the South.<ref>{{Web citation|author=Liz Lowengard|newspaper=[[Liberation School]]|title=Medicine, the ‘pill’ and the struggle for reproductive rights|date=2005-06-01|url=https://www.liberationschool.org/05-06-01-medicine-pill-struggle-reprod-html/|retrieved=2023-08-12}}</ref>
'''Margaret Higgins Sanger''' (September 14, 1879 – September 6, 1966) was a Statesian birth control activist. She opened the USA's first birth control clinic in 1916, which authorities shut down ten days later. She was initially a member of the [[Socialist Party of America|Socialist Party]] and supporter of the [[Industrial Workers of the World|IWW]] but moved to the right in the 1920s and joined the [[eugenics]] movement.<ref>{{Web citation|author=Donna Goodman|newspaper=[[Liberation School]]|title=Women’s struggle for suffrage and liberation: The road to legal equality|date=2022-03-08|url=https://www.liberationschool.org/womens-movement-1910-1940/|retrieved=2023-08-12}}</ref> In 1939, she began the Negro Project to prevent the Black population from growing in the South.<ref>{{Web citation|author=Liz Lowengard|newspaper=[[Liberation School]]|title=Medicine, the ‘pill’ and the struggle for reproductive rights|date=2005-06-01|url=https://www.liberationschool.org/05-06-01-medicine-pill-struggle-reprod-html/|retrieved=2023-08-12}}</ref>

Latest revision as of 23:28, 3 April 2024

Margaret Sanger
Born
Margaret Louise Higgins

September 14, 1879
Corning, New York, United States
DiedSeptember 6, 1966
Tucson, Arizona, United States
Political orientationLiberal feminism


Margaret Higgins Sanger (September 14, 1879 – September 6, 1966) was a Statesian birth control activist. She opened the USA's first birth control clinic in 1916, which authorities shut down ten days later. She was initially a member of the Socialist Party and supporter of the IWW but moved to the right in the 1920s and joined the eugenics movement.[1] In 1939, she began the Negro Project to prevent the Black population from growing in the South.[2]

References