Margaret Sanger's Brownsville Clinic, 1916
Introduction
Text-to-speech Audio
Images
Clinic exterior at 46 Amboy Street
Sanger, her sister Ethel Byrne and Yiddish interpreter Fania Mindell counseling clients.
Mothers with carriages stand outside the Brownsville Clinic, Brooklyn
Part of the Comstock Laws- the acts that Margaret Sanger fled from when she went to England.
Backstory and Context
Text-to-speech Audio
Sanger fled to England in 1914 after having charges brought against her in respect to the Comstock Laws. These laws were a set passed by the US Congress to help stop the spread of immoral information finding its way into young children`s minds. This included the open conversations and giving open access of contraceptives. While in England, Margaret Sanger studied more about contraceptives, mainly birth control, and used this new information in the clinic she would open back in America.
Sanger worried that women would not come to the clinic due to
laws that prevented her from publicly spreading the word. However, when a mass
of people showed up it brought to realization just what these women were
looking for, and who they could confide and open up to. Women did come to the
clinic when it opened, but it was shut down only 10 days after opening because of
the notice it was getting by the young women of the area. The police used
undercover cops to obtain enough information to raid the clinic.
After being shutdown for the last time after getting evicted from the property,
Sanger founded the American Birth Control League in 1921. Her mission with
founding this league was to educate women on the prevention of
pregnancy and proper use of contraceptives. She used lectures and writings to
inform women. In 1923, the first legal birth control
clinic opened under Sanger and the league. It was known as the
Clinical Research Bureau.
Sources
Grimaldi, Jill. "Margaret Sanger Papers Project." Margaret Sanger Papers Project. October 16, 2015. Accessed May 29, 2016. https://sangerpapers.wordpress.com/tag/brownsville-clinic/.
"Margaret Sanger." Margaret Sanger. Accessed May 25, 2016. http://www.u-s-history.com/pages/h1676.html.
Seward, Sheraden. "The Comstock Laws (1873)". https://embryo.asu.edu/pages/comstock-law-1873
https://100years.plannedparenthood.org/