Bookplate designed for Margaret Sanger (1879–1966)
Margaret Sanger is widely recognized as the founder of the birth control movement in the United States. She opened the first birth control clinic in the country in Brooklyn in 1916 and was arrested that year under New York State’s 1868 “little Comstock law” for disseminating advocacy materials. This bookplate features a design that Sanger’s friend Rockwell Kent originally created for the cover of her pamphlet The Birth Control Review, first published in 1917 and one of the publications that was censored. Sanger founded the American Birth Control League in 1921, became the first president of Planned Parenthood in 1942, and was instrumental in the development of the first oral contraceptive, Enovid, which the FDA approved in 1960. Her legacy is complicated, however, by her association with white supremacist groups and support for eugenics.
: The Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Division of Art, Prints and Photographs, Print Co…
Currently on View at Stephen A. Schwarzman Building
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