Have you ever imagined what our society would be like today, if no one was there to put an end to the illegal abortion and provide information about birth control? Fortunately, in the nineteenth century Margaret Sanger raised her voice against the dangerous, illegal abortions. Not only did Sanger put an end to the life-threatening abortions, she was also the founder of the American Birth Control League, which later became the Planned Parenthood Federation in 1942. Her journey was full of obstacles and very controversial; yet, she stayed determined and did not abandon her goal and she endured those obstacles to help the women have more control over their reproductive healths.
In a book called The American People Creating a Nation and a Society, Jeffrey writes that, “Middle-class Americans had limited family size in the nineteenth century through
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Jeffery writes that, “She obtained the latest medical and scientific European studies…. that women could separate sex from procreation,” (475). Sanger publishing this helped the topic of sexuality to come out; even though, it was still far away from being acceptable. Publishing about sex almost caused her to be arrested as she got accused of violating postal code. She had to flee from America to Europe in order to keep her movement from stopping after her arrest. She never stopped working on what she started and after she returned to America, she founded the American Birth Control League. To give women more control over their lives she sacrificed a lot and her hard work did not go in vain as Jeffery writes that, “The Social justice progressives also campaigned for woman suffrage. Like so much of progressivism, it was part of a global crusade,” (475). She awakened the women from all over the world to fight for their rights not just for planned