American Birth Control League Explained

The American Birth Control League (ABCL) was founded by Margaret Sanger in 1921 at the First American Birth Control Conference in New York City.[1] The organization promoted the founding of birth control clinics and encouraged women to control their own fertility.[1] In 1942, the league became the Planned Parenthood Federation of America.[1]

History

The League was founded by Margaret Sanger in 1921, and incorporated under the laws of New York State on April 5, 1922. Frances B. Ackerman served as the first Treasurer. Anne Kennedy was the Executive Treasurer. Lothrop Stoddard[2] and C. C. Little were among the founding directors. Birth Control Leagues had already been formed in a number of larger American cities between 1916 and 1919 due to Sanger's lecture tours and the publication of the Birth Control Review. By 1924, the American Birth Control League had 27,500 members, with ten branches maintained in Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Colorado, and the Canadian province of British Columbia.

In June 1928, Margaret Sanger resigned as president of the American Birth Control League, founding the National Committee on Federal Legislation for Birth Control and splitting the Birth Control Clinical Research Bureau from the League. Following this, the presidents of the ABCL were Eleanor Dwight Robertson Jones (1928–1934),[3] Catherine Clement Bangs (1934–1936) and C. C. Little (1936–1939), and one of its vice presidents was Juliet Barrett Rublee.[4] In 1939 the two were reconciled and merged to form the Birth Control Federation of America. In 1942 the name was changed to Planned Parenthood Federation of America.[1]

Its headquarters were located at 104 Fifth Avenue, New York City from 1921–1930 and at various offices on Madison Avenue from 1931–1939. It was not associated with the National Birth Control League, founded in 1915 by Mary Coffin Ware Dennett, or the later Voluntary Parenthood League.[5]

The American Birth Control League was also instrumental in regards to African Americans and birth control.

Goals and activities

The ABCL was founded on the following principles, here excerpted from Margaret Sanger's The Pivot of Civilization:

We hold that children should be

  1. Conceived in love;
  2. Born of the mother's conscious desire;
  3. And only begotten under conditions which render possible the heritage of health.

Therefore we hold that every woman must possess the power and freedom to prevent conception except when these conditions can be satisfied.

At its founding, the ABCL announced the following purposes:

Margaret Sanger listed the following aims of the organization in the appendix of her book The Pivot of Civilization:

In 1921, the ABCL organized the First American Birth Control Conference at New York City, November 11–18, 1921. Subsequent conferences were held over the next two years in Philadelphia, Cincinnati, Albany, and Chicago. The ABCL arranged the holding of the Sixth International Birth Control Congress in the United States in 1925. The ABCL published leaflets, pamphlets, books, and a monthly missal named Birth Control Review. Margaret Sanger served as the first president of the organization.

See also

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Kathryn Cullen-DuPont. Encyclopedia of women's history in America. 28 November 2011. 1 August 2000. Infobase Publishing. 978-0-8160-4100-8. 11.
  2. Carey . Jane . 2012-11-01 . "The Racial Imperatives of Sex: birth control and eugenics in Britain, the United States and Australia in the interwar years" . Women's History Review . 21 . 5 . 733–752 . 10.1080/09612025.2012.658180 . 145199321.
  3. Web site: Wirth . Thomas . VanOmmeren Briggs . Askia . Andrews . Theodore K. . Biographical Sketch of Eleanor Dwight Robertson Jones . 2022-09-09 . Alexander Street Documents.
  4. Web site: MSPP / About Sanger / Birth Control Organizations . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20180207180059/http://www.nyu.edu/projects/sanger/aboutms/organization_abcl.php . 2018-02-07 . 2018-03-05.
  5. Constance M. Chen, "The Sex Side of Life," Chicago Tribune, p. 181.
  6. Web site: The Pivot of Civilization from Project Gutenberg. Onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu. 27 June 2019.