Margaret Sanger and her "fight" for women's rights. Margaret Sanger was one of 11 children. She was born September 6, 1879 in Corning, New York. When she finished high school, she entered a boarding school. Where she had to drop out to help take care of her ill mother; Margaret’s mother got really sick from having to many children. This is one of the many reasons Margaret dedicated her life to help women. She did not want other women to have to go through what her mother went through. Margaret worked hard to have birth control and abortion legalized. She was also apart of the women’s rights movement (Margaret Sanger 1). Margaret Sanger donated her life to try to save women from having complications from many unwanted pregnancies; she was an …show more content…
Margaret printed newspaper articles about women’s rights. She was told to stop printing that part of the newspaper, but she never stopped. She opened up her on birth control clinic; she was arrested and taken to jail. She was in jail for a month (Margaret Sanger 1). She would see 50 women at a time, standing in line for $5 abortion because they had no access to birth control. Abortion was unsafe during this time period. Margaret helped women gained the right to decide when they want to have a child (Margaret Sanger 2). She started the American Birth Control Conference and American Birth Control League (Streissguth, Thomas pg.38). She had become a member of the women’s rights movement, they organized and marched, they also joined a socialist party (Margaret Sanger 2). When Margaret finished college with a nurse degree, she was going to go back to college to get her doctor’s degree. She got married instead, to William Sanger. Margaret and her husband had three children, Grant, Peggy, and Stuart; but their daughter Peggy died, November 6 of pneumonia. So during that hard time of her death the authorities left Margaret and her family alone for a little while. Then finally they dropped the charges but Margaret didn't stop trying to get birth control pills legalized (Witherbee, Amy