For the past several weeks,
we have been briefly investigating some of the words and actions of early
feminists who opposed abortion. Some advocates of abortion
have attempted to dismiss the evidence that early feminists were pro-life,
arguing, for example, that they only opposed abortion because surgery in a
time prior to antibiotics was dangerous to women. Our investigation, though
brief, has clearly shown that feminist opposition to abortion went much deeper.
The health and safety of women was one of many inseparable concerns. Abortion Is Inconsistent
With Core Feminist Values Many of the writers we
surveyed considered abortion destructive, unjust, inhuman, or an act that
violates nature. Eliza
Bisbee Duffey,
for example, called abortion “a sin against nature.” Regarding those who “either
destroy the embryo in the womb, or cast it off when born,” Mary
Wollstonecraft, author of the classic Vindication of the Rights of
Woman, wrote, “Nature in everything demands respect, and those who violate
her laws seldom do so with impunity.” Feminist and novelist Eleanor
Kirk called abortion a “work of destruction.” Because abortion is, according
to the first female presidential candidate Victoria
Woodhull, not “in accordance with the law of justice it will come home
to its subject and be repaid with all its accumulated mass of inhumanity.”
In other words, early feminists considered abortion inconsistent with feminist
values like justice and nonviolence. Abortion Harms Women
and Society Not surprisingly, then,
abortion was frequently regarded as a symptom of injustice, the objectification
and exploitation of women, or other social disorders. It was likewise understood
as unjust, dangerous, or degrading to women, and harmful to society as a whole.
“When a man steals to satisfy hunger,” Mattie
Brinkerhoff wrote,
“we may safely conclude that there is something wrong in society—so when a
woman destroys the life of her unborn child, it is an evidence that either
by education or circumstances she has been greatly wronged.” In describing
Dr. Charlotte
Lozier’s refusal to perform abortion, abortion was called “foulest wrong
committed against [women].” Woodhull wrote that “no woman can practice this
crime without in part destroying her own life,” and presented abortion as
demoralizing and ultimately fatal for all human society. Dr.
Elizabeth Blackwell, the first woman to receive a medical degree from
an American medical school, wrote that providing abortions “was an utter degradation
of what might and should become a noble position for women,” i.e. the profession
of physician. Feminists Called Abortion
Feticide Woodhull, as we have seen,
wrote that “the rights of children, then, as individuals, begin while they
yet remain the fœtus.” Early feminists opposed abortion not only because it
was dangerous to women, but also because abortion kills children. Sarah
Norton, who together with Susan B. Anthony agitated for the admission
of women to Cornell University, called it “foeticide” and “ante-natal child
murder,” and wrote of “the right of the unborn to be born.” Brinkerhoff called
abortion “infanticide” and said it “destroys the life of [a woman’s] unborn
child.” Kirk likewise referred to abortion as a form of “infanticide” in which
“the murderer pockets his big fee, and keeps on his work of destruction.”
Paulina
Wright Davis, an editor for Anthony’s newspaper The Revolution,
called abortion “murder of the innocents.” “After a child is, no one
has a right to tamper with its existence,” wrote Duffey, who called abortion
“murder.” Woodhull too called abortion “murder” and “a slaughter of the innocents.” Early Abortions Also
Condemned “From the moment of conception,
the embryo is a living thing, leading a distinct, separate existence from
the mother, though closely bound to her,” wrote Duffey. “[T]here is no time
in the whole process of the growth of the human body from the moment of conception
until death, that pulsations of life are not present,” Woodhull agreed. For this reason, early
feminist condemnation of abortion included not only procedures performed late
in pregnancy, but also abortifacient medicines designed to induce early abortion.
Norton wrote, “[C]irculars are distributed… recommending certain pills and
potions for the very purpose, and by these means the names of these slayers
of infants, and the methods by which they practice their life-destroying trade,
have become ‘familiar in our mouths as household words.’” Anthony’s newspaper,
The
Revolution,
had a known policy that “no quack or immoral advertisements [for patent medicines]
will be admitted” because “Restellism [a period term for abortion] has long
found in these broths of Beelzebub, its securest hiding place.” Writing about
the Revolution’s policy, editor Parker Pillsbury called “quack medicine”
venders “Foeticides and Infanticides” who “should be… regarded with shuddering
horror by the whole human race.” Duffey held that “every maker, advertiser
and seller of patent medicines, warranted to remove ‘female obstructions,’
should be subjected to prosecution and punishment…. [Because] their real intent
is for the procurement of abortion, and so everybody knows.” Creating Solutions Because abortion was understood
as destructive, a violation of nature, a symptom of injustice, dangerous and
degrading to women, and a form of killing, the early feminists we surveyed
believed that the problem of abortion should be addressed at its root causes.
Holistic solutions should include education, securing women’s rights, resources,
and support. Duffey wrote that “the surest preventative against this crime
will be a thorough teaching to women, even before marriage, of the physiology,
hygiene, duties and obligations of maternity,” and that women should be told
“the how and the why of the whole matter, and they will discover the wrong
themselves, and feel the full force of it, far more than they ever
can by taking it merely on the say-so of men.” Brinkerhoff noted: “the question
now seems to be, how shall we prevent this destruction of life and health?
Mrs. [Elizabeth Cady] Stanton has many times ably answered it—‘by the true
education and independence of woman.’” Woodhull and Claflin agreed with Brinkerhoff
and Stanton: “[W]hile we shall at all times freely discuss the matter, objectively
as to its results, we shall not forget to look at the matter subjectively,
to find the remedy, which, if we mistake not, is in granting freedom and equality
to woman.” Kirk believed women’s rights and the rights of the unborn were
linked, and envisioned a hopeful future where educated women have political
clout to protect the unborn. Dr. Lozier, while refusing to perform an abortion,
“pitied and tenderly cared for the [woman]” and “proffered to the young woman
any assistance in her power to render.” Jane
Addams, for
whom peace was “[not] an absence of war, but the unfolding of world-wide processes
making for the nurture of human life,” was presented in this series as an
exemplar of activism dedicated to creating holistic solutions to the challenges
faced by real people. The key to Jane Addams’ success as a social justice
activist was working to address real people’s problems at their roots. The
best way to approach any human problem, she believed, was to approach people
actively and sympathetically, learn to understand the challenge or difficulty
from their perspective, and use that knowledge to address the problem’s root
causes. Living the Legacy of
Pro-Life Feminism Feminists for Life recognizes
that abortion is a reflection that our society has failed to meet the needs
of women. We promote the practical resources and support women want and need
to make nonviolent choices, and our own efforts are shaped by the core feminist
values of justice, nondiscrimination, and nonviolence. “While we would be pro-life
feminists whether or not the early American feminists opposed abortion,” said
Feminists for Life President Serrin Foster, “we are proud to continue their
legacy. By giving birth to new solutions, Feminists for Life builds on the
foundation they created. We are working to realize their unfulfilled vision
for the world.” Recommended reading: The author of this
series is grateful for the research and assistance provided by Mary Krane
Derr, co-editor with Rachel MacNair and Linda Naranjo-Huebl of ProLife
Feminism Yesterday & Today: Expanded Second Edition (Xlibris, 2005).
Their book is available through Feminists for Life’s website at http://www.feministsforlife Cat Clark is author
of "The Truth About Susan B. Anthony: Did One of America's
First Feminists Oppose Abortion?" the feature story in the Spring
2007 issue of The American Feminist,® and "Herstory"
on Pearl Buck (
http://www.feministsforlife
............................................ "Abortion
is a reflection that we have not met the needs of women. Women deserve better
than abortion." Feminists
for Life is a 501(c)3 organization. |