American Decades
Sanger, Margaret 1879-1966
BIRTH CONTROL REFORMER
A Father's Injunction.
Margaret Sanger almost single-handedly founded the birth control movement in America and was the driving force in the development of modern contraceptives. Her efforts to make birth control universally available to American women saved the lives of countless women by ending the nightmare of constant pregnancy that often burdened families with more children than they could support. Sanger was born as Margaret Louisa Higgins in Corning, New York, on 14 September 1879, the middle child in an Irish American family of eleven children. She often quoted her father, a sculptor of graveyard art and an avowed socialist, that the only obligation he expected of his children was to "leave the world a better place."
Maternity Ward Nurse.
While she nursed her tubercular mother, Sanger borrowed several medical books that fired her own ambition to become a physician. But...
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1910's Medicine and Health
- Overview
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Topics in the News
- The Great Influenza Epidemic of 1918-1919
- The Growth of Group Practice
- Health Insurance
- Improving Hospitals
- Medicine in World War I
- Nurses in World War I
- Preventive Medicine and Public Health
- Psychological Testing in the Military
- Regulating Medicine
- The Revolution in Medical Education
- Surgery
- Technological and Medical Research Advances
- The War on Tuberculosis
- What Could We Do about Cancer in 1913?
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Headline Makers
- Goldberger, Joseph B. 1874-1929
- Kendall, Edward Calvin 1886-1972
- Mayo, William James 1861-1939 and Mayo, Charles Horace 1865-1939
- Meyer, Adolf 1866-1950
- Morgan, Thomas Hunt 1866-1945
- Sanger, Margaret 1879-1966
- Terman, Lewis Madison 1877-1956
- Vaughan, Victor Clarence 1851-1929
- Wald, Lillian D. 1867-1940
- Welch, William Henry 1850-1934
- People in the News
- Awards
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Medicine and Health, 1910–1919
