Tells the life story of Margaret Sanger, founder of the birth control movement in the U.S., describing the challenges she faced along the way and the impact of her work on America and the world.
Provides insights into the life and thought of early twentieth-century birth control advocate Margaret Sanger through an annotated chronological arrangement of excerpts from her letters, articles, and speeches.
New York nurse Margaret Sanger describes her work with women who became pregnant without wanting to and how it influenced her fight for birth control as a basic right.