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This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 6 March 2025. American birth control activist and nurse (1879–1966) Margaret Sanger Sanger with her sons Grant and Stuart, circa 1918 Born Margaret Louise Higgins (1879-09-14) September 14, 1879 Corning, New York, U.S. Died September 6, 1966 (1966-09-06) (aged 86) Tucson, Arizona, U.S. Other names ...
Sanger, Margaret (1914), Family Limitation, a 16-page pamphlet; also published in several later editions. 1917, 6th edition, Michigan State University Archived 2022-09-02 at the Wayback Machine; Sanger, Margaret (1916), What Every Girl Should Know, Max N. Maisel; 91 pages; also published in several later editions.
William Sanger (November 12, 1873 – July 23, 1961) was a German-born and American-educated architect and artist. He was the first husband of Margaret Sanger . Early life and education
Ninety-nine years ago today, on October 16, 1916, Margaret Sanger opened the first family planning clinic in the United States. Sanger is credited with sparking the birth control movement, and ...
Birth Control Review, sometimes styled The Birth Control Review, was a lay magazine established and edited by Margaret Sanger in 1917, three years after her friend, Otto Bobsein, coined the term "birth control" to describe voluntary motherhood or the ability of a woman to space children "in keeping with a family's financial and health resources."
In 1917, during Ethel Byrne's famous hunger strike, Margaret Sanger came to the orphanage and met Byrne for the first time in the young girl's memory to tell her of her mother and her work. [8] Byrne met her mother for the first time in ten years when she was 16, after which she began occasionally living with Ethel and her lover Rob Parker.
Planned Parenthood's Manhattan Margaret Sanger Health Center will be renamed, and Planned Parenthood of Greater New York is working with the city to also rename an honorary street sign that marks ...
The arrest of William Sanger in 1915 for distributing Margaret Sanger's birth control pamphlet catalyzed the birth control movement in the United States, and this time Dennett decided to get involved. [27] Dennett co-founded The National Birth Control League in 1915 with Jesse Ashley and Clara Gruening Stillman. [28]