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  1. By Debra Michals, PhD | 2017. In the early 20th century, at a time when matters surrounding family planning or women’s healthcare were not spoken in public, Margaret Sanger founded the birth control movement and became an outspoken and life-long advocate for women’s reproductive rights.

  2. Mar 6, 2024 · Margaret Sanger was an early feminist and women's rights activist who coined the term "birth control" and worked towards its legalization. By Biography.com Editors Updated: Mar 6, 2024. Photo...

  3. Planned Parenthood traces its roots back to a nurse named Margaret Sanger. Sanger grew up in an Irish family of 11 children in Corning, New York. Her mother, in fragile health from many pregnancies, including seven miscarriages, died at age 50 of tuberculosis.

  4. ' The Pill | Article. Margaret Sanger (1879-1966) Margaret Sanger devoted her life to legalizing birth control and making it universally available for women. Born in 1879, Sanger came of...

  5. MARGARET SANGER — OUR FOUNDER Sangers battle for family planning was unrelenting, unyielding, and totally focused. Her crusade made it legal to publish and distribute information about sex, sexuality, and birth control. It: • created access to birth control for, as she saw it, poor women, women of color, and immigrant women;

  6. Margaret Sanger, orig. Margaret Higgins, (born Sept. 14, 1879, Corning, N.Y., U.S.—died Sept. 6, 1966, Tucson, Ariz.), U.S. birth-control pioneer. She practiced obstetrical nursing on New York’s Lower East Side, where she noticed a relationship between poverty, uncontrolled fertility, and high rates of infant and maternal deaths.

  7. Oct 16, 2016 · One hundred years ago today in 1916, Margaret Sanger started a revolution when she opened America’s first birth control clinic in the Brownsville neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York. It was an...

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