American Decades
Sanger, Margaret 1879-1966
BIRTH-CONTROL ADVOCATE
Accomplishments.
Margaret Sanger was directly responsible for the development of the oral contraceptive pill, though that accomplishment was only a very small part of her life's work. She was convinced at an early age that women had to have control of their reproduction as a matter of health and well-being. Also, she predicted the horrible consequences of unchecked population growth. Thomas Malthus had done this first a century before, but his work was flawed by a failure to realize the potential of new technologies in farming to feed more mouths. Sanger predicted World War II as a consequence of over-population.
Childhood.
She was born in 1879, the sixth of eleven children of Michael and Anne (Purcell) Higgins. Her father encouraged his children to think freely. When an insulting teacher drove Margaret Higgins from public school in the eighth grade, the family pooled their money to...
[The entire page is 700 words long]
1950's Science and Technology
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- Chromosome Number in Humans
- Communication
- The Computer Comes of Age
- Computer Predicts Election
- Computer Technology: Evolving Science
- Cyclotron/Bevatron
- DNA
- Dental Drills: High Speed and Painless (More or Less)
- Fossil Dating
- H-Bomb
- ICBM
- Jets
- Mapping the Ocean Floor
- Maser/Laser
- The Microwave Oven
- The New Frontier
- Nuclear Submarines
- Oral Contraceptives
- Radio Astronomy
- Radioimmunoassay
- The Saint Lawrence Seaway
- Sex Change
- Telephones in the Age of Technology
- Television
- Transatlantic Cable
- The Transistor
- Women in Science and Technology
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Awards
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Science and Technology, 1950–1959
