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         Sanger Margaret:     more books (23)
  1. Margaret Sanger: An Autobiography by Margaret Sanger, 1938-06
  2. Woman of Valor: Margaret Sanger and the Birth Control Movement in America by Ellen Chesler, 1992-06-15
  3. Birth Control in America: The Career of Margaret Sanger by David M. Kennedy, 1970-01-28
  4. Margaret Sanger: A Biography of the Champion of Birth Control by Madeline Gray, 1979-04
  5. Margaret Sanger: Pioneer of Birth Control by Lawrence Lader, 1969-06
  6. Margaret Sanger: Rebel For Women's Rights (Women in Medicine) by Vicki Cox, 2004-09
  7. The Margaret Sanger Papers: Documents from the Sophia Smith Collection and College Archives, Smith College (Series 2 (Research Collections in Women's Studies) by Margaret Sanger, Esther Katz, et all 1995-12
  8. Life of Ones Own Three Gifted Women by Joan Dash, 1988-05

21. Sanger, Margaret Higgins - Archive
Sanger, Margaret Higgins Period 19231934 Reproduction 1 microfilm Biographical/historicalnote American nurse (1879-1966); campaigned for birth control
http://www.iisg.nl/archives/gias/s/10768000.html
International Institute of Social History
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Sanger, Margaret Higgins Period Reproduction
: 1 microfilm Biographical/historical note : American nurse (1879-1966); campaigned for birth control; founded the American Birth Control League in 1921. Contents : Her correspondence as director of the American Birth Control League with various persons and institutions, including Guy Aldred, Rudolf Elkan, Lord Dawson, the Malthusian League, the New Generation League and Rose Witcop. NB. Originals at the Library of Congress, Washington. Top

22. Browse Top Level > Texts > Project Gutenberg > Authors > S
Ca. 18241874; Sanger, Margaret, 1879-1966; Sangharakshita, Bikshu,1925-; Sangster, Margaret E. (Margaret Elizabeth), 1894-1981; Saunders
http://www.archive.org/texts/textslisting-browse.php?collection=gutenberg&cat=Au

23. Margaret Sanger, A Woman On The Front Lines Of Reproductive Freedom - Expository
Freedom. by EM Staff. Margaret Sanger. (18791966). No woman cancall herself free who does not own and control her body. No woman
http://www.tcdesign.net/Expository/msanger_frontlines.htm
Volume 1, Issue 2 Margaret Sanger: A Woman on the Front Lines of Reproductive Freedom. by EM Staff Margaret Sanger "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." Margaret Sanger The , piece on Margaret Sanger, written by Gloria Steinhem, starts out by quoting literary seer, H.G. Wells's 1931 prediction, "The movement she started will grow to be, a hundred years from now, the most influential of all time. When the history of our civilization is written, it will be a biological history, and Margaret Sanger will be its heroine," couldn't have been more true, or more relevant in today's world. Now, when we have a president who is bent on reversing, internationally, a woman's self-determination regarding birth control and abortion, EM would like to honor the work and vision of Margaret Sanger, the founder of Planned Parenthood Federation. Born in Corning, New York, on September 11, 1879, Margaret Sanger was the sixth of eleven children (eleven living children; but her mother had been pregnant eighteen times) born to Ann and Michael Higgins. Ann spent her days tending to her children while her husband worked as a sculptor. The arts, then as now, was not steady work, meaning that most of the time they lived in poverty. In spite of that, good cheer and good works abounded in the Higgins household. At an early age, Margaret was taught to do charity work and to be involved in her community. This duty to others and to a cause served her well as an adult.

24. Encyclopedia Of Marxism: S
S. SAG, SaintSimon, Comte (1760-1825). Sakharov, Andrei (1921-1989),Sanger, Margaret (1879-1966). Sapronov, TV, Sartre, Jean-Paul (1905-1980).
http://www.marxists.org/glossary/s.htm
Encyclopedia of Marxism: S
S
SAG Saint-Simon, Comte (1760-1825) Sakharov, Andrei (1921-1989) Sanger, Margaret (1879-1966) ... Encyclopedia of Marxism

25. Women And Marxism: Marxists Internet Archive
Myra (18971993) Parker, Dorothy (1893-1967) Pichugina M. Reissner, Larissa (1895-1926)Rolland-Holst, Henriettte Sanger, Margaret (1879-1966) Schreiner, Olive
http://www.marxists.org/subject/women/
MIA: Subject: Women
This subject section has been created to provide broad documentation both on women's issues and Marxism, and also a space for women's writings that are significant, but transcriptions not currently volumous or organized enough to warrant their own section. Some of these writers are not Marxists, but are included for context or reference. The intention is to also include the cultural as well as political milieu in which revolutionary women have worked during their struggles. As with the rest of MIA, most heavily represented are classic texts. The few references to contemporary Marxism-Feminism are meant to be a gateway to further exploration for interested readers. Questions, texts or suggestions welcome at sia@marxists.org. Non-Fiction Authors Fiction/Poetry Subjects
Non-Fiction Authors
Balabanoff, Angelica
Beauvoir, Simone de

Beaton, Lynn

Bebel, August
...
Schreiner, Olive
(Ralph Iron) (1855-1920)
Shaginyan, Marietta

Shaw, George Bernard

Simmons, May Wood

Spadoni, Adriana
...
Zetkin, Clara
Related sites: Women and Marxism Marxist / Materialist Feminism NOEMA: The Collaborative Bibliography of Women in Philosophy Anarchism and Womens Liberation ... Marxists Internet Archive

26. Pictoral History - Margaret Sanger
The sixth of 11 children in a poor Irish family, Margaret Sanger (18791966)had seen her own mother die at the age of 49 as the result of tuberculosis
http://www.plannedparenthood.org/about/PHOTOALB/MARGE.HTM
home page site index local clinics about us ... giving to planned parenthood
The sixth of 11 children in a poor Irish family, Margaret Sanger (1879-1966) had seen her own mother die at the age of 49 as the result of tuberculosis contracted after too many pregnancies. In the early 1910s, Sanger worked as a maternity nurse on the Lower East Side of New York, delivering babies in the homes of poor, mostly immigrant women. The women she nursed knew nothing of how to prevent pregnancy and, because of the "Comstock laws," could get no information from their doctors. Instead, they resorted to the illegal practitioners of five-dollar abortions, on whose tables many of them died. "Tales," Sanger wrote, "were poured into my ears a baby born dead, great relief the death of an older child, sorrow but again relief of a sort the story told a thousand times of death from abortion and children going into institutions. I shuddered with horror as I listened to the details and studied the reasons back of them destitution linked with excessive childbearing. The waste of life seemed utterly senseless."

27. Mike L., Good Schools, Darwin And Evolution
familiar with Margaret Sanger. She sounds to me like a person I would rather notknow personally. Fortunately, because she is dead (18791966), that privilege
http://www.goodschools.com/mike.htm
SELECTED
CONTENTS: Home
Theory of Evolution and Racism Dawkins A Dinosaur Defends the Indefensible Other Letters and My Comments ... Other Articles of Interest "...every group that wishes to see conflicting interests resolved reasonably, or is wise about the conditions under which it enjoys its own freedom, must be profoundly concerned with the state of freedom of speech and assembly, freedom of inquiry and teaching, freedom of press and other forms of communication, freedom of cultural opportunity and development. For in large measure intelligent moral choice depends upon them."
Sidney Hook (1902-1988), disciple of John Dewey, and champion of pragmatism and democracy
Mike sees a relationship between the work of Margaret Sanger and Darwin I am not terribly familiar with Margaret Sanger. She sounds to me like a person I would rather not know personally. Fortunately, because she is dead (1879-1966), that privilege will never become an issue.

28. Ask Jeeves: Search Results For "Modern Society Children"
http//www.expo98.msu.edu/bios/Sanger.html 4. Sanger, Margaret Higgins (18791966),social reformer Born on September 14, 1879, in Corning, New York, Margaret
http://webster.directhit.com/webster/search.aspx?qry=Modern Society Children

29. Sophia Smith Collection, List Of Collections: S
Sanger, Margaret, 18791966 birth control advocate; nurse; labor organizer;writer; lecturer; editor; journalist 113 linear ft., ca.
http://www.smith.edu/libraries/libs/ssc/collects.html
List of Collections: S A B C D ... W-Z
Sabin, Florence Rena
physician; scientist; professor;
public health specialist
12.5 linear ft., 1872-1985
Safe Passage (Northampton, MA)
women's shelter;
community service agency
6 linear ft., 1971-
Restricted access

Saint-Pierre, Genevieve
dates unknown
travel writer; traveler; hunter
.5 linear ft., 1907-1962
Sanger, Eleanor
journalist; television sports producer 5.75 linear ft., Restricted access
1914 birth control periodical (Margaret Sanger Papers) Click on image to view page one of this periodical.
Sanger, Margaret
birth control advocate; nurse; labor organizer; writer; lecturer; editor; journalist 113 linear ft., ca. 1800s-1973 (bulk 1915-1962). See also African American Women Birth Control , and Diaries subject guides and Margaret Sanger Research Bureau
Sanville, Jean , dates unknown
social worker; founder, Society for Clinical Social Work; founder, Institute for Clinical Social Work; founder, Los Angeles Society for Psychoanalytic Studies 10 linear ft., 1951-1996 Restricted access
Saunders, Mildred Louise (Boie)
writer; poet; editor;

30. Sophia Smith Collection, Subject Guides-- Birth Control And Reproductive Rights
Margaret Sanger (18791966), birth control pioneer and founder ofthe birth control movement. Sanger's personal and professional
http://www.smith.edu/libraries/libs/ssc/subjbirth.html
Subject Guides BIRTH CONTROL AND REPRODUCTIVE RIGHTS Selected Primary Sources in the Sophia Smith Collection Ames Family Papers (1844-1990s). Include Blanche Ames Ames (1878-1969; Smith Class 1899), birth control advocate and founder of the Birth Control League of Massachusetts (BCLM) (see PPLM). Papers related to birth control (1916-66) include correspondence, records of BCLM, Family Welfare Foundation, plus information on various other birth control organizations. There is also material about the religious controversy in Massachusetts over birth control activities. Mary Ritter Beard (1876-1958), pioneer in the study and teaching of women's history, writer and crusader for women's rights. Papers (1931-1958) include circa 80 letters to Dorothy Brush about Japanese birth control and the work of Shizue Ishimoto Kato. Dorothy Hamilton Brush (1894-1968), writer, editor of International Planned Parenthood Federation News and crusader for women's rights, especially birth control. Included in the papers (1946-1968) are articles, pamphlets and correspondence related to sex education and birth control, research material for a book on Margaret Sanger, a photo album of a trip to the Far East with Sanger and an unpublished play entitled "Margaret." May Farquharson (1894-1992), organizer of the Birth Control League (later Family Planning League) of Jamaica. The collection (1937-1992) consists mostly of clippings, loose and in scrapbooks, related to her work for the advancement of family planning against social and political odds.

31. Margaret Sanger Papers
activism of the radical labor left and mobilized by her work as a home nurse in theimmigrant ghettos of New York, Margaret Sanger (18791966) became convinced
http://adh.sc.edu/mepinfo/Sanger/sangbase.htm
The Papers of Margaret Sanger
Cover illustration from Birth Control Review, August 1921, by
Rockwell Kent. Courtesy of Rockwell Kent Legacies, Au o'Sable
Forks, N.Y.
About Margaret Sanger
Margaret Sanger's name is virtually synonymous with the development of birth control, a term she helped coin in 1914. Schooled in the pre-World War I activism of the radical labor left and mobilized by her work as a home nurse in the immigrant ghettos of New York, Margaret Sanger (1879-1966) became convinced that in liberating women from the tyranny of unwanted pregnancies, birth control would effect fundamental change. From the publication of The Woman Rebel in 1914 through her leadership of the International Planned Parenthood Federation in the 1950s, Margaret Sanger dedicated herself to making birth control safe, effective, legal, and socially sanctioned. Committed to insuring that every woman had both the knowledge and right to practice birth control, Sanger is best known for her battles over the right to legally disseminate contraceptive information and open birth control clinics. Yet her decision to press for the acceptance of contraception by the medical establishment and to support medically sanctioned birth control has also been critical to contemporary attitudes and debates. Birth control today remains a key component of social and economic change, and continues to be surrounded by controversies and debates at whose center lie the policies developed and publicized by Margaret Sanger.

32. Margaret Sanger
Margaret Sanger 18791966 Done by Lady of Belmar American social activist MargaretSanger dedicated her life to making birth control available to all women in
http://www.angelfire.com/nj2/carolslittleangels/sanger.html
Margaret Sanger
Done by Lady of Belmar American social activist
Margaret Sanger dedicated her life to making birth control available to all women in the world and thereby increased the quality and length of women's and children's lives.
Introduction Margaret Louise Higgins was born on September 11, 1879, in Corning, New York.
The sixth of eleven children born to Anne Purcell and Michael Hennessey Higgins, Margaret grew up in a bustling household in the woods on the outskirts of town.
While her mother took care of the large family, her father worked as a sculptor, chiseling headstones for local cemeteries.
His work was unsteady, and with so many mouths to feed the family usually struggled to make ends meet.
Though poor themselves, the Higginses believed in helping others and taught Margaret to do the same.
Her father often told her: "You have no right to material comforts without giving back to society the benefits of your honest experience".
Margaret greatly admired her father, who was known as somewhat of a rebel in town, and took his words to heart.
Education Margaret attended public school through the eighth grade and then boarding school at the Claverick College and Hudson River Institute.

33. Margaret Sanger
Margaret Sanger (18791966) was the founder of the American birth controlmovement. If you would like to read more about her, please
http://www.soros.org/repro/margaret.htm
Other books written about Margaret Sanger: Linda Gordon, Woman's Body, Woman's Right: A Social History of Birth Control in America (New York: 1976) David M. Kennedy, Birth Control in America: The Career of Margaret Sanger (New Haven:1970) James Reed, The Birth Control Movement in American Society: From Private Vice to Public Virtue (Princeton: 1984) Links to websites about Margaret Sanger:
women of the hall - National Women's Hall of Fame

about us
contact us grants ... grant guidelines margaret home

34. AIM25: British Library Of Political And Economic Science: PALMER, Eileen, Fl 191
Control in Zurich, the centre was reorganized as the Birth Control InternationalInformation Centre (BCIIC), with Margaret Sanger (1879-1966) as president and
http://www.aim25.ac.uk/cgi-bin/search2?coll_id=5826&inst_id=1

35. Margaret Sanger
Birth Control Advocate Margaret Sanger (18791966) As a member of LillianWald's Visiting Nurse Service in New York, Margaret Sanger
http://writetools.com/women/stories/sanger_margaret.html
The Week's Famous and Infamous Women
When motherhood becomes the fruit of a deep yearning, not the result of ignorance or accident, its children will become the foundation of a new race.
Margaret Sanger
Birth Control Advocate Margaret Sanger (1879-1966)
As a member of Lillian Wald's Visiting Nurse Service in New York, Margaret Sanger saw first-hand the suffering caused by unwanted pregnancies as the poor women of the Lower East Side died from too many pregnancies or from their own crude attempts at abortion. Margaret's own mother had died after bearing 11 children and having 7 miscarriages. These experiences, coupled with the inspiration of Emma Goldman's public speeches on sexual freedom, turned Margaret into a birth control advocate at a time when the topic was not only barred from polite conversation, but when sending information about contraception through the mail was a criminal offense. In 1914, Margaret launched a feminist monthly called The Woman Rebel Roe v. Wade decision legalized abortion in the United States, it remains one of the nation's most divisive and violence-provoking issues. Margaret was born on September 14, 1879 and died just days before her 87th birthday in 1966. Books by and about Margaret Sanger Subscribe to Women's Stories!

36. Pluralism And Unity--Biography--Margaret Sanger
Sanger,Margaret. Dates 18791966. Born in Corning, New York. Major Events.Trained as Nurse. Married architect; moved to suburb of New York.
http://www.expo98.msu.edu/bios/sanger.html
Sanger Margaret Dates: 1879-1966 Born in: Corning, New York Major Events Trained as Nurse Married architect; moved to suburb of New York Family moved to Manhattan; became involved in I. W. W. After conversations with Emma Goldman, began to advolate birth control and control of venereal disease 1914:published periodical, Woman Rebel Circulated information of Birth Control; fled to Europe in fear of arrest Returned to creat birth-control clinic in Brooklyn1916 1921: founded American Birth Control League(later called Planned Parenthood Major Publications Family Limitation What Every Girl Should Know Happiness in Marriage My Fight for Birth Control Margaret Sanger: An Autobiography Writings: House of Representatives Testimony Voices: Links to Texts: Family Limitation Related link:

37. Gale - Free Resources - Women's History Month - Biographies - Margaret Sanger
Margaret Sanger. 18791966 American social activist. Margaret Sangerdedicated her life to making birth control available to all women
http://www.galegroup.com/free_resources/whm/bio/sanger_m.htm
Quick Title Search Press Room About Us Contact Us Site Map ... Browse Our Catalog document.write(url); Free Resources Reference Reviews Marketing for Libraries Black History Month ... Women's Rights on Trial

Margaret Sanger
American social activist Margaret Sanger dedicated her life to making birth control available to all women in the world and thereby increased the quality and length of women's and children's lives. Introduction Margaret Louise Higgins was born on September 11, 1879, in Corning, New York. The sixth of eleven children born to Anne Purcell and Michael Hennessey Higgins, Margaret grew up in a bustling household in the woods on the outskirts of town. While her mother took care of the large family, her father worked as a sculptor, chiseling headstones for local cemeteries. His work was unsteady, and with so many mouths to feed the family usually struggled to make ends meet. Though poor themselves, the Higginses believed in helping others and taught Margaret to do the same. Her father often told her: "You have no right to material comforts without giving back to society the benefits of your honest experience" (Sanger, p. 23). Margaret greatly admired her father, who was known as somewhat of a rebel in town, and took his words to heart.

38. 2002
limitation, in one form or another, has been practiced from the earliest time, butit took the efforts of one woman, Margaret Sanger (18791966), to forge a
http://www.nyu.edu/projects/sanger/2002.htm
The National History Day Topic for 2002 is Revolution, Reaction, Reform in History. For a detailed description of the National History Day Program and this year's topic, see the History Net.
Below are suggested topics that relate to Margaret Sanger and the birth control movement:
Margaret Sanger's Crusade for Birth Control
Family limitation, in one form or another, has been practiced from the earliest time, but it took the efforts of one woman, Margaret Sanger (1879-1966), to forge a worldwide movement for birth control that refocused its message towards the needs of women and the public health. Focusing on Sanger as a leader who revolutionized women's reproductive rights and role in society through her efforts at legislative and social reform. Projects can also focus on various efforts to reform the laws prohibiting birth control laws, using the resources of the Sanger Papers.
One could argue that one result of Sanger's quest for safe, legal and effective birth control was a revolution in women's roles in society. Examine the lives of women before and after Sanger's crusade to determine how they were changed and what the impact of those changes were.
Sanger's agitation for birth control began as a radical call for a new society (revolution). It drew and continues to draw opposition from the medical profession, religious leaders and lawmakers (reaction), but within just a few years, birth control was widely accepted and its adherents were in the mainstream of reform. Examine the specific situations and events that spurred Sanger to take up her revolutionary challenge, how she brought it to the mainstream, and the reactionary forces that opposed her.

39. Margaret Sanger
The sixth of 11 children in a poor Irish family, Margaret Sanger (18791966)had seen her own mother die at the age of 49 as the result of tuberculosis
http://www.ppadoc.org/margaret_sanger.htm
Margaret Sanger gained worldwide renown, respect, and admiration for founding the American birth control movement and, later, the Planned Parenthood Federation of America, as well as for developing and encouraging family planning efforts throughout the international community. The sixth of 11 children in a poor Irish family, Margaret Sanger (1879-1966) had seen her own mother die at the age of 49 as the result of tuberculosis contracted after too many pregnancies. In the early 1910's, Sanger worked as a maternity nurse on the Lower East Side of New York, delivering babies in the homes of poor, mostly immigrant women. The women she nursed knew nothing of how to prevent pregnancy and, because of the "Comstock laws," could get no information from their doctors. Instead, they resorted to the illegal practitioners of five-dollar abortions, on whose tables many of them died. "Tales," Sanger wrote, "were poured into my ears a baby born dead, great relief the death of an older child, sorrow but again relief of a sort the story told a thousand times of death from abortion and children going into institutions. I shuddered with horror as I listened to the details and studied the reasons back of them destitution linked with excessive childbearing. The waste of life seemed utterly senseless." For medical questions, or to schedule an appointment with the nearest Planned Parenthood center, call toll-free 1-800-230-PLAN.

40. Daily Celebrations ~ Margaret Sanger, Struggle For Expression ~ September 14 ~ I
~ Margaret Sanger Margaret Sanger Feminist Margaret Sanger (18791966) was bornMargaret Louise Higgins on this day to a poor family in Corning, New York.
http://www.dailycelebrations.com/091499.htm
September 14 ~  Struggle for Expression Birth Control in America "Woman m u s t not a c c e p t ; she must challenge . She must not be a w e d by that which has been built up around her; she must reverence that woman in her which s t r u g g l e s for expression. " ~ Margaret Sanger Feminist Margaret Sanger (1879-1966) was born Margaret Louise Higgins on this day to a poor family in Corning, New York. Her crusade began when she watched her mother 's deterioration and death from 18 pregnancies. She coined the term birth control and fought with tenacity for women at a time when women did not even have the right to vote. "No woman can call herself free who does not own and control her own body," she said, defying church and state. "No woman can call herself free until she can choose consciously whether she will or will not be a mother." Charismatic and controversial, in 1914 Sanger published the newspaper The Women Rebel . Two years later, she opened the first family planning clinic in Brooklyn, was jailed for 30 days, adding fire to the cause which gave women the right to control their own lives. In 1921, she established the American Birth Control League which eventually became Planned Parenthood "The first right of every child is to be wanted, to be desired, to be planned for with an intensity of

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