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         Sanger Margaret:     more books (23)
  1. Contemporary Authors: Biography - Sanger, Margaret (Higgins) (1879-1966)
  2. The case for birth control. prepared by Margaret H. Sanger. by Sanger. Margaret. 1879-1966., 1917-01-01
  3. The pivot of civilization / by Margaret Sanger ; preface by H.G. Wells by Margaret (1879-1966) Sanger, 1923-01-01
  4. Woman and the new race by Margaret Sanger ; with a preface by Ha by Sanger. Margaret. 1879-1966., 1920-01-01
  5. The Autobiography of Margaret Sanger (Dover Value Editions) by Margaret Sanger, 2004-05-11
  6. Margaret Sanger's Eugenic Legacy: The Control of Female Fertility by Angela Franks, 2005-01-28
  7. Margaret Sanger: Her Life in Her Words by Miriam Reed, 2003-07
  8. The Selected Papers of Margaret Sanger, Volume 1: The Woman Rebel, 1900-1928
  9. Killer Angel: A Short Biography of Planned Parenthood's Founder, Margaret Sanger by George Grant, 2001-02
  10. Margaret Sanger and the Birth Control Movement by Ronald Moore, 1995-05-30
  11. The Margaret Sanger Story: and the Fight for Birth Control by Lawrence Lader, 1975-01-14
  12. Margaret Sanger (An Impact Biography) by Elyse Topalian, 1984-02
  13. The Importance of Margaret Sanger by Deborah Bachrach, 1993-03
  14. Margaret Sanger: Pioneer of the Future by Emily Taft Douglas, 1975

41. BioLinks.org - Your Biology Resource!
link to a friend! Margaret Sanger, 18791966 - Profile of the founderof the American birth control movement. (Added Mon Jan 01
http://www.biolinks.org/Issues/Family_Planning/History/Sanger__Margaret/
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Home Issues Family Planning History : Sanger, Margaret
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  • About Margaret Sanger - Materials from the Margaret Sanger Project at New York University, including biography, writings, and historical sketches of birth control organizations she was associated with.
    (Added: Mon Jan 01 2001 Rating: 0.00 Votes: 0) Rate It Send this link to a friend!
  • Margaret Sanger Papers Project - Historical editing project of the Department of History at New York University, established to locate, arrange, edit, research, and publish the papers of the noted birth control pioneer. Extensive information about Sanger and the project.
    (Added: Mon Jan 01 2001 Rating: 0.00 Votes: 0) Rate It Send this link to a friend!
  • Margaret Sanger, 1879-1966 - Profile of the founder of the American birth control movement.
    (Added: Mon Jan 01 2001 Rating: 0.00 Votes: 0)

42. Margaret Sanger: Radiant Rebel
Margaret Sanger (18791966), in a UCLA Extension course, was profiled along withDarwin, Diego Rivera, and Ghandi as one of the Four Who Shook the Twentieth
http://www.miriamreed.com/sanger.htm
MARGARET SANGER (1879-1966), in a UCLA Extension course, was profiled along with Darwin, Diego Rivera, and Ghandi as one of the "Four Who Shook the Twentieth Century." And indeed she did change the twentieth century by dedicating her life to supporting the rights of women and children, teaching and lecturing on birth control throughout the world and organizing the first world conference on population control. As a nurse working in New York City's Lower East Side, Sanger saw how the lives of both mothers and children were destroyed by large families: the health of the mother broken and the children remanded to poverty. Yet women were ignorant how to prevent conception, and federal law forbade contraceptive advice even by a medical doctorthis dictated by the narrow-minded Comstock federal laws, which classified the discussion of contraception as an "obscenity." For three decades, Sanger fought the Comstock laws with personal and political action, with lectures and press conferences, with newspaper and book publications, with international conferences that she personally organized, with extensive scientific research, and by establishing a birth control clinic that educated and cared for women. Sanger did not advocate abortion, but prevention. Her work led to what became the international Planned Parenthood organization and to development of the first birth control pill.

43. Impact Of Margaret Sanger And Mary Ware Dennett On Birth Control Movement, Intro
little opposition until the second decade of the twentieth century, when reformersMary Ware Dennett (18721947) and Margaret Sanger (1879-1966) took up the
http://womhist.binghamton.edu/birth/intro.htm
How Did the Debate Between Margaret Sanger and Mary Ware Dennett
Shape the Movement to Legalize Birth Control?
Introduction
Margaret Sanger and the American Birth Control League.
Photo courtesy of the Library of Congress Documents selected and interpreted by
Melissa Doak
and Rachel Brugger
State University of New York at Binghamton
December 1999
Last updated April 1, 2000 The Comstock Law of 1873, officially the Act for the Suppression of Trade in, and Circulation of, Obscene Literature and Articles of Immoral Use, declared the distribution of information about contraception obscene and therefore illegal for the first time in the history of the United States. By 1885, twenty-four states had followed the federal government's lead and passed "little Comstock laws," at times going considerably farther than the parent federal legislation.[ ] The Comstock law, the culmination of both a personal crusade by Anthony Comstock and a "social purity" campaign that aimed to eradicate drunken and licentious behavior, ended two centuries of free dissemination of information about how to prevent pregnancy. One historian has argued that after 1873, while some contraceptive information remained available in veiled advertisements and subtly worded advice literature, both the quality and quantity of contraceptive information, advice, and devices were decidedly inferior to that available before the passage of the Comstock Law. The new legislation especially limited the access of impoverished Americans to information about how to prevent pregnancy because wealthier women could often obtain medical advice.[

44. Encyclopædia Britannica
links. Margaret Sanger, 18791966 The National Women's Hall of FameBiography of the social reformer. More Web Sites. Partners. •Top
http://search.britannica.com/search?query=Margaret Sanger

45. Miscellaneous Groups Of Images: Subjects: 70
Sand paintingsArizona18901900. Sanger, Margaret,1879-1966. SantaBarbara Mission. Santa Catalina Island (Calif.) Santa Fe (NM)1880.
http://memory.loc.gov/pp/collSubjects70.html
PREV NEXT INDEX NEW SEARCH
Subjects
Rock formationsWyoming1890-1910.
Rock, John H.

Rockefeller, Nelson A.(Nelson Aldrich),1908-1979.

Rockford (Ill.)
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46. List Of Available Finding Aids
196K); Rustin, Bayard T. , 1910 Papers of Bayard T. Rustin ( 82K);Sanger, Margaret, 1879-1966 Papers of Margaret Sanger ( 287K);
http://memory.loc.gov/faid/FaidCollList.html
Library of Congress Search Finding Aids
COLLECTION TITLES

47. Human Rights
Ann Fitzgerald (Editor); Lucy Burns, 18791966 (USA); Margaret Sanger,1879-1966 (USA); Margaret Sanger Clinic; Breaking Barriers The
http://www.distinguishedwomen.com/subject/hrights.html
Distinguished Women of Past and Present
First Page
Name Index Subject Index Related Sites ... Search Search: Books Popular Music Classical Music Video Enter keywords...
Human Rights
Born Before 20th Century:

48. Social Service/Activism
Raden Adjeng Kartini; Margaret Sanger, 18791966 (USA); Another profile;Another profile; Margaret Sanger Clinic; Breaking Barriers The
http://www.distinguishedwomen.com/subject/socserv.html
Distinguished Women of Past and Present
First Page
Name Index Subject Index Related Sites ... Search Search: Books Popular Music Classical Music Video Enter keywords...
Social Service/Activism
Born Before 20th Century:

49. MARGARET SANGER
United States (18791966). Margaret Sanger was one of the first women to publiclyproclaim that women had a fundamental right to control their bodies.
http://www.usd.edu/honors/HWB/hwb_i/sanger.htm
MARGARET SANGER
United States
Margaret Sanger was one of the first women to publicly proclaim that women had a fundamental right to control their bodies. She believed access to safe and reliable birth control to be a necessary part of the liberation of women. Ms. Sanger pushed for equality of women in all spheres of life and insisted that an important facet of this was the liberation of sexuality for women. She prophesied women gaining the legalization of contraception along with greater freedom to speak of and practice sexa freedom which men already possessed. She published pamphlets, journals, books, gave lectures, and set up an international network of health care clinics where a full range of preventive health care including contraception, gynecology, sex education, and counseling was provided for poor women and also those who felt more at ease in a female clinic. Throughout her struggle to legalize contraceptives she encountered many barriers, including her jailing in 1917 and subsequent trial for distributing condoms in Brooklyn. Due to her perseverance, however, the Supreme Court of the United States declared contraceptives legal and during Lyndon Johnson's term he implemented family planing into America's public health and social welfare programs. By making contraceptives legal and widely available, women acquired more control over their bodies and thus over their lives in general. This newly gained control gave women more self-confidence and assurance to proceed to assert themselves and their ideas into other facets of life.

50. Northern Star Online | In-Depth
Margaret Sanger (18791966) This activist was a birth control advocate at a timewhen it was illegal simply to send mail with information on the topic.
http://www.star.niu.edu/in-depth_look/womens_history/profiles/index.asp
Women History Makers
Jane Addams (1860-1935)

This social reformer devoted her life to helping the urban poor. In 1889, she founded the Hull House in a Chicago slum, with programs such as day care and adult education. One of the first settlement houses in America, Hull House inspired many others across the nation. Although she was widely criticized for her opposition to World War I, Addams later became one of the most admired activists of the time, winning the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1931.
Betty Friedan (1921- )
Rosa Parks (1913- )
Margaret Sanger (1879-1966)
Madeleine Albright (1937- )
Eleanor Roosevelt (1884-1962)
Katherine Graham (1917-2001)
Oprah Winfrey (1954- )
She was born into poverty and a victim of child abuse, but Winfrey became one the most beloved and successful women in show business. She is the first African-American woman to own her own television production company and was nominated for an Academy Award after her first movie, The Color Purple. But she is best known for her national talk show aimed to inspire positive change and personal responsibility in her more than 14 million viewers. Barbara Walters (1931- ) Mae Jemison (1956- ) In 1992, Jemison became the first African-American woman to travel to space. During her eight-day flight on the spacecraft Endeavour, she conducted several scientific experiments on how gravity affects living organisms. Being an astronaut is only one of her many accomplishments. She has also worked as a chemical engineer, a scientist, a physician, and a teacher. Recognizing the lack of diversity in the fields of science and technology, she is committed to encouraging both women and minorities to pursue careers in these areas.

51. LitSearch: An Online Literary Database
Sanger, Margaret (18791966) Works by this author Pivot of Civilization,The. Copyright 2001 Keith Ito. All Rights Reserved. Admin Control Panel.
http://daily.stanford.edu/litsearch/servlet/DescribeAuthor?name=Sanger, Margaret

52. Margaret Louise Sanger
Margaret Louise Sanger. (18791966). Women.com ranks Margaret SangerNo. 39 in it's list of the Top 100 Women of the Millenium! Margaret
http://www.manchester.edu/Academic/Programs/departments/econ/files/museum/women/
Margaret Louise Sanger Women.com ranks Margaret Sanger No. 39 in it's list of the Top 100 Women of the Millenium! Margaret Sanger started a movement that lead to women having more control over their own bodies, leading the push for free access to birth control. Margaret was the sixth of eleven children. She was born on September 14, 1879, in Corning, NY. She saw her own mother die of tuberculosis due to too many pregnancies. Because of her mom's death, Margaret decided to become a maternity nurse. She saw many pregnant women who knew nothing about preventing pregnancies and could not receive information from doctors about birth control. Many of the women she saw had tried self-induced or "back alley" abortions. A few of the women had died because of these unhealthy abortion practices. Due to all of the terrible things she had seen, Margaret decided that women needed to be educated about birth control and have access to it. In 1914, she launched a publication entitled, The Women Rebel , a monthly feminist newspaper that advocated birth control. Because of this newspaper she was indicted for sending "obscene" materials, which forced her to flee to Europe, where she continued to gather her information.

53. Raymond Pearl Papersca.1895-1940
Emerson, 18561944; Russell, ES (Edward Stuart), 1887-1954; Sanger, Margaret,1879-1966; Stefansson, Vilhjalmur, 1879-1962; Sweeney, James
http://www.amphilsoc.org/library/browser/p/pearl.htm

54. Names In Encyclopedia Of American Biography
Political Royce, Josiah (18551916) Idealism Ryan, John A. (1869-1945) Social/PoliticalSanger, Margaret (1879-1966) Social/Political Santayana, George
http://www.pragmatism.org/dmap/encyclopedia_amer_biography.htm
Dictionary of Modern American Philosophers, 1860-1960 Encyclopedia of American Biography , 2nd ed. Eds. Garraty and Sternstein. Harper Collins, 1995
Adams, Brooks (1848-1927) [Social/Political]
Adams, Henry (1838-1918) [Social/Political]
Addams, Jane (1860-1935) [Social/Political]
Agassiz, Louis (1807-1873) [Phil. Science/Logic]
Babbit, Irving (1865-1933) [Social/Political]
Beard, Charles A. (1874-1948) [Social/Political]
Beard, Mary R. (1876-1958) [Social/Political]
Beecher, Henry Ward (1813-1887) [Phil. Religion]
Bellamy, Edward (1850-1898) [Social/Political]
Benedict, Ruth F. (1887-1948) [Social/Political] Bentley, Arthur F. (1870-1957) [Phil. Science/Logic] Boas, Franz (1858-1942) [Social/Political] Bourne, Randolph (1886-1918) [Social/Political] Breckinridge, Sophonisba (1866-1948) [Social/Political] Bryan, William Jennings (1860-1925) [Social/Political] Buckley, William F., Jr. (1925- ) [Social/Political] Bush, Vannevar (1890-1974) [Phil. Science/Logic] Butler, Nicholas Murray (1862-1947) [Social/Political] Cage, John (1912-1992) [Aesthetics]

55. Names In Companion To American Thought
Royce, Josiah (18551916) Idealism. Sanger, Margaret (1879-1966) Social/Political.Santayana, George (1863-1952) Realism/Naturalism.
http://www.pragmatism.org/dmap/companion_to_amer_thought_list.htm
Dictionary of Modern American Philosophers From A Companion to American Thought , ed. Fox and Kloppenberg (Oxford: Blackwell, 1995). [brackets indicate the DMAP subject area for that thinker]
Adams, Brooks (1848-1927) [Social/Political] Adams, Henry (1838-1918) [Social/Political] Addams, Jane (1860-1935) [Social/Political] Adler, Mortimer (1902- ) [Social/Political] Agassiz, Louis (1807-1873) [Phil. Science/Logic] Alcott, Amos Bronson (1799-1888) [Idealism] Anthony, Susan B. (1830-1906) [Social/Political] Arendt, Hannah (1906-1975) [Social/Political] Babbit, Irving (1865-1933) [Social/Political] Beard, Charles A. (1874-1948) [Social/Political] Beard, Mary R. (1876-1958) [Social/Political] Becker, Carl (1873-1945) [Social/Political] Beecher, Catharine (1800-1878) [Women/Minorities] Beecher, Henry Ward (1813-1887) [Phil. Religion] Bell, Daniel (1919- ) [Social/Political] Bellamy, Edward (1850-1898) [Social/Political] Benedict, Ruth F. (1887-1948) [Social/Political] Bernstein, Richard J. (1932- ) [Pragmatism] Bettelheim, Bruno (1903-1990) [Ethics]

56. Tucson Pima Public Library /Children's
index. Subjects, Sanger, Margaret, 18791966 Juvenile literature.Feminists United States Biography Juvenile literature.
http://infolynx.ci.tucson.az.us:90/kids/1899,1953,2065/search/tpeople in focus/t
Tucson-Pima Public Library Catalog
WORD AUTHOR TITLE SUBJECT Children's Materials Internet View Entire Collection Record 15 of 22
Author Whitelaw, Nancy. Title Publisher LOCATION CALL # STATUS Wilmot children's CHECK SHELF Edition 1st ed. Description Series People in focus book. Summary A biography of Margaret Sanger, the indomitable fighter for birth control and a feminist who asked women to take responsibility for their freedom. Notes Includes bibliographical references (p. ) and index. Subjects Sanger, Margaret, 1879-1966 Juvenile literature. Feminists United States Biography Juvenile literature. Birth control United States History Juvenile literature. ISBN

57. Girlposse.com Women's History Month - Margaret Sanger
Subscribe Unsubscribe. Kiss.com Find the man of your dreams! Women’sHistory Month Margaret Sanger (1879-1966). Margaret Sanger
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Women’s History Month
Margaret Sanger
Margaret Sanger is one of the best known leaders of the birth control movement, and the founder of Planned Parenthood. She was not only the catalyst of important change for American women, but for women around the world. Inspired at a young age by her mother’s deteriorated health after bearing eleven children. Since her family was poor, Margaret’s mother also shouldered most of the responsibilities of raising her clan. Margaret swore she would not repeat her mother’s history.
Margaret became a nurse in 1902, treating mostly poor immigrant women in New York’s Lower East side. Sanger’s life path was altered when one of her patient’s died as a result of a self-induced abortion. Although the women’s religion did not prohibit the use of contraception, information was not readily available to her on how to safely prevent pregnancy. At the time, birth control was associated closely with prostitution. “Birth control” was synonymous with obscenity, and therefore an illegal topic for writing and public address. When Margaret began printing the “Women Rebel” in 1914, postal inspectors kept a close watch on her. She was eventually arrested and indicted for her “feminist” views. She fled to Europe shortly after.

58. SearchUK
available for download. Margaret Sanger, 18791966 - Profile of thefounder of the American birth control movement. Margaret Sanger
http://www.searchuk.co.uk/Top/Society/Issues/Family_Planning/History/Sanger,_Mar
SearchUK http://searchuk.co.uk/

59. S-San: Positive Atheism's Big List Of Quotations
Margaret Sanger (18791966) First president of Planned Parenthood in 1939, Sangerstruggled against the Comstockian Revenue Act to legalize, in 1937, the
http://www.positiveatheism.org/hist/quotes/quote-s.htm
Positive Atheism's Big List of Quotations
S-San
No-Frames Quotes Index

Load This File With Frames Index

Home to Positive Atheism
French author of erotica
There is no God, Nature sufficeth unto herself; in no wise hath she need of an author.
Marquis de Sade : Cur-de-fer, in Justine, ou les Malheurs de la Vertu The idea of God is the sole wrong for which I cannot forgive mankind.
Marquis de Sade Aline et Valcour It is not the opinions or the vices of private individuals that are harmful to the State, but rather the behavior of public figures.
Marquis de Sade source unknown If Nature denies eternity to beings, it follows that their destruction is one of her laws. Now, once we observe that destruction is so useful to her that she absolutely cannot dispense with it ... from this moment onward the idea of annihilation which we attach to death ceases to be real ... what we call the end of the living animal is no longer a true finis, but a simple transformation, a transmutation of matter. According to these irrefutable principles, death is hence no more than a change of form, an imperceptible passage from one existence into another.
Marquis de Sade Philosophy in the Bedroom , "Dialogue the Fifth: Yet Another Effort, Frenchmen, If You Would Become Republicans" (1795)

60. Moondance: Yesterday's Trailblazer
Comets Across The Sky. Artwork Bachanten II by Anita van Kempen. Yesterday'sTrailblazer. The Woman Rebel. Margaret Sanger (18791966).
http://www.moondance.org/1996/autumn96/short2.html
Comets Across The Sky
Artwork: Bachanten II by Anita van Kempen
Yesterday's Trailblazer
The Woman Rebel
Margaret Sanger (1879-1966) The century had changed not too many years earlier and Margaret Sanger, laboring daily as a home nurse in the immigrant ghettos in New York, felt the times needed changing also. Watching women die in childbirth, which came too often and too harshly, motivated her to publish The Woman Rebel and establish the National Birth Control League in 1914. Through these efforts, she coined the term "birth control" and established the principle that the foundation of human rights is based upon a woman's right to control her body. She was the first to promote the concepts of every child as a wanted child and every woman entitled to decide when, or whether, to have a child. She didn't stop there and further introduced the idea that women are entitled to sexual pleasure and fulfillment, just like men. The Woman Rebel taught wives to fight for their own rights, and revealed there were safe ways for women to prevent excess pregnancies. Becoming a national symbol of protest, her goal was to eliminate the tyranny of unwanted pregnancy, thus giving women control over their own lives. 1915 found her debating, in court, whether poor women might receive the same access to birth control the rich enjoyed. Undaunted, she opened a birth control clinic in Brooklyn in 1916 and was arrested for creating a public nuisance. Still she pressed on, challenging and defeating both federal and state "Comstock Laws" which prohibited the dissemination of birth control information to women, including publication and distribution of information about sex, sexuality, contraception, and human reproduction. The defeat of these laws nationwide allowed doctors to freely disseminate birth control information for the first time in our nation's history.

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