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Jilly_in_VA

(11,106 posts)
Mon Apr 25, 2022, 05:00 PM Apr 2022

The 19th-Century Woman's Secret Guide to Birth Control

IN 1878, SARAH CHASE WAS on the lecture circuit. A graduate of a homeopathic college and a single mother, Chase made her living in Manhattan giving talks at community spaces around the city and, afterwards, selling what contemporary police reports and newspapers called “vile articles,” including sponges, syringes, and instructions for how to, in the parlance of the era, “bring down the menses,” in other words, induce an abortion.

Examples of the kind of ad hoc birth control devices that Chase sold are now on display at the Dittrick Museum of Medical History at Case Western Reserve University, where visitors can peruse objects and exhibits covering ancient times to the present that demonstrate that women have always shared information about how to control their reproductive health—and others have always tried to stop them.

In the 19th century, Chase’s livelihood raised the hackles of one of the most infamous anti-birth control crusaders of modern times: Anthony Comstock, the lobbyist behind the eponymous laws that criminalized selling birth control in 1873. In an episode chronicled by Andrea Tone in Devices and Desires: A History of Contraceptives in America, Comstock set up a sting operation to catch Chase in the act and promptly served her an arrest warrant.

This was the wild west era of birth control and abortion, the period after Comstock’s laws went into effect in 1873 and before Margaret Sanger’s clinics in the 1910s. A cursory, top-down look at history suggests that in this period, birth control was illegal, abortion was unheard of, and women were at the mercy of biology when it came to controlling their reproductive fates. Indeed, in 2017, a journalist stated on NPR that abortion was not a part of American life in the 19th century because the word “abortion” appeared in no newspapers from that time (an assertion that was later corrected thanks to an outcry from historians).

https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/19th-century-birth-control-dittrick
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I hope Anthony Comstock is STILL burning in hell!

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The 19th-Century Woman's Secret Guide to Birth Control (Original Post) Jilly_in_VA Apr 2022 OP
a just punishment for A. Comstock would be, not only burning in hell sdfernando Apr 2022 #1
+1 2naSalit Apr 2022 #2
The Man Who Hated Women book re: Comstock Timeflyer May 2022 #3
Anthony Comstock Jilly_in_VA May 2022 #4

sdfernando

(5,422 posts)
1. a just punishment for A. Comstock would be, not only burning in hell
Mon Apr 25, 2022, 05:15 PM
Apr 2022

but being forced to endure on a hourly basis what women endure during childbirth. All natural of course...no help and no painkillers...all 100% natural childbirth.

Timeflyer

(2,722 posts)
3. The Man Who Hated Women book re: Comstock
Tue May 31, 2022, 01:41 PM
May 2022

I was in my 60s before I knew that my mother had been denied birth control (a diaphragm) in 1952, in Massachusetts, thanks to the Comstock Laws of the late 19th, early 20th century. How could something that prevented abortions be prohibited and for so long? She was shamed and told "this is a Catholic state!" Someone suggested the rhythm method--so helpful. I hate that she didn't have any choice but to conceive and carry, or risk death in a back-alley. Read The Man Who Hated Women, by Amy Sohn to learn how one dude's anxiety about sex---I better stop, steam's coming out of my ears.

Jilly_in_VA

(11,106 posts)
4. Anthony Comstock
Tue May 31, 2022, 01:48 PM
May 2022

Harry Anslinger, J. Edgar Hoover.....three prominent bastards. I don't care if their parents WERE married!

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