Consider This from NPR - Remembering an Abortion Rights Activist Who Spurned the Spotlight
Episode Date: October 14, 2021Patricia Maginnis, who was 93 when she died on August 30, may have been the first person to publicly call for abortion to be completely decriminalized in America. Despite her insistence on direct act...ion on abortion-rights at a time when many were uncomfortable even saying the word "abortion," Maginnis is not a bold letter name of the movement. That may be because she didn't seek the limelight and she cared more for action then self-presentation.Guests include Lili Loofborow, who profiled Maginnis for Slate; Professor Leslie J. Regan, who wrote the book When Abortion Was a Crime; and the artist Andrea Bowers whose video piece, Letters to An Army of Three recreated the messages people would send Maginnis when they were desperate to access abortion services. Special thanks to the Schlesinger Library, where the 1975 oral history of Pat Maginnis is housed. In participating regions, you'll also hear a local news segment that will help you make sense of what's going on in your community.Email us at considerthis@npr.org.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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There was a time in most places in this country where if you got an abortion,
you could face interrogation by police. Which meant decades ago, the vast majority of people seeking abortions in the U.S.
had to go underground for a doctor or secretly perform the procedure on themselves
or simply leave the country.
If you can only give me the name of a Mexican doctor, please use the enclosed envelope as soon as possible.
Thousands upon thousands of people wrote desperate letters back in the 1960s to a woman named Pat McGinnis.
She was an abortion rights activist who had compiled a very special list.
Please send me a list of doctors in Tijuana that take care of me.
It was a catalog of sorts of dozens of abortion providers outside the U.S.
Because for many people, this was the only choice.
I've seen several doctors, and all have refused to even try to help me.
Writing this, I feel ashamed and desperate.
I am married, but my husband has just been called for jungle training in Korea for 18 months.
So a child would cause too many problems at this time.
I'm 18 years old, single and three months pregnant by a married man.
You are my last resort.
She had stacks and stacks, almost like towers, of like the plastic shopping bags with letters in them.
Andrea Bowers was the artist who recorded these actors reading out loud these letters
addressed to Pat McGinnis and two women who worked closely with her. Bowers compiled these accounts
into a video project called Letters to an Army of Three. And then Bowers found out that two days
before a new law in Texas banning almost all abortions went into effect, Pat McGinnis died at 93 years old.
I miss her.
And this work changed my life, you know?
To see McGinnis' life end
just as a new restrictive abortion law in Texas
was set to begin
has prompted new reflection
on where Pat McGinnis fit into the abortion rights movement,
a movement that
often didn't know what to do with a radical activist who demanded immediate direct action.
She felt like the people running the movements were a little fearful of her tactics and politics.
And perhaps their tactics in politics at that time
were too radical for the direction the movements were going.
And so I always thought that she was kind of hidden
because of the radicality.
Consider this.
What's happening in Texas right now is reminiscent of the world McGinnis for...
So to help us understand what might lie ahead, we'll revisit the battle she fought.
From NPR, I'm Elsa Chang. It's Thursday, October 14th. This message comes from WISE, the app for doing things in other currencies.
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It's Consider This from NPR. So back in the early 1960s, abortion was illegal all across the U.S.,
except when doctors granted certain medical exceptions.
But for anyone who didn't fall under one of those exceptions and still wanted an abortion,
the procedure could be dangerous.
Women were dying every year.
This was the largest cause of maternal deaths. Just savage.
This is a snippet of an oral history Pat McGinnis gave to the Schlesinger Library at Radcliffe College back in 1975. is just demoralizing in the extreme. And yet what was so overwhelming
was that people were so terrified of the word abortion.
But McGinnis was about to change that.
So she made a point of actually saying the word
as much as she could.
Lily Loofborough profiled McGinnis for Slate
and says McGinnis was kind of the first person
to take the taboo out of the word.
I'm going to talk about abortion. Abortion! She just was really determined to not let
conventions that I think she had found extremely stultifying
keep her from liberties that she felt she and other women deserved.
Some hundred thousand women every year, this is California women alone, subject themselves to improperly or illegal abortion.
Here's McGinnis giving an interview on the street in 1963.
I think that in itself is a rather staggering figure.
And I feel great indignation as a woman to think that women have to subject themselves to second-rate medical care for a safe surgical procedure.
She was the first person who spoke publicly saying abortion should be completely decriminalized.
I'm Leslie Regan, and I'm the author of the book When Abortion Was a Crime.
McGinnis, Regan says, would stand on street corners in San Francisco in the early 60s, passing out leaflets to people about abortion classes and
even do-it-yourself abortions. How to self-induce and where you could go to get a safe abortion.
So she's the first to do that. McGinnis distributed this literature partly to get
the information out, but also to try deliberately to get arrested. We made great efforts to point out that we were soliciting
you to have abortions. In order to be arrested and challenged. Well, show people how ridiculous
it was. Remember, this was a time when abortion was illegal everywhere in the U.S., except in
rare cases. And by the late 1950s, early 60s, local and state governments were getting aggressive
about enforcing these laws. They went after providers, shut down clinics. Seeking an abortion
became this clandestine, sometimes dangerous experience.
They're blindfolding women. They're telling them to come to a corner where they'll be picked up,
blindfolded, driven around until they don't know where they are. And they are alone
at all times. So the experience for women seeking abortions is extremely frightening.
As I pictured what it would have been like to live as a woman during this time,
I was fascinated to learn that this wasn't what most of American history was like.
You see, during the 17 and early 1800s in the U.S., ending a pregnancy
was totally permissible under the law, at least up until a point known as quickening.
Quickening is when a woman could feel fetal movement inside of her.
And Regan says in the months before quickening, a pregnant person could deliberately self-induce
a miscarriage without any penalty.
Even the Catholic Church at the time did not condemn this practice.
There were literally domestic guidebooks that described various ways to do this.
Some of it is graphic and hard to hear.
Here's Regan explaining.
There were different kinds of teas and herbs that people grew in their gardens.
And then if those didn't work, people would turn to other things using crochet hooks to invade the vagina and the uterus and induce
a miscarriage. But, you know, first they tried a lot of other things before they would go there.
But eventually, states start outlawing abortion in the mid-1800s. And then the legal landscape
begins to shift even more in the 20th century. As women's
rights movements grow, crackdowns on abortions accelerate. Law enforcement agencies intensify
efforts to catch abortionists in the act, interrogating women suspected of seeking abortions.
This was the world Pat McGinnis grew up in, a woman who knew from a very early age that she never wanted to have children.
She grew up in an unhappy home with a mother who never seemed to like being a mom.
She had many frustrations, which she often took out on us.
She later goes through three illegal abortions of her own, two of which were self-induced.
Trying to leave her Oklahoma past behind,
McGinnis joins the Army.
She trains as a surgical technician, and in the wards, Lily Loofborough says,
McGinnis sees women injured from botched abortions
or forced to give birth
even when they didn't want to have a baby.
And it was all truly horrifying for her.
And she said to me more than once
that that was really the thing that radicalized her, was seeing sort of the gamut of things that women have to go through
in the name of irreversible biology that nobody lets them opt out of.
McGinnis plunges into activism after the Army. She moves to San Francisco. And at first,
her advocacy starts with smaller stuff, like collecting signatures to reform abortion laws.
But then pretty quickly, she gets to a point where she's like, forget reforming these abortion laws.
Those reform laws aren't going to work.
Let's abolish those laws.
We need to argue for repeal.
Let's repeal every law that criminalizes abortion. Leslie Regan says this idea, repealing all laws that criminalize abortion,
it's an idea that may feel commonplace today.
But back then, in the early 60s,
this idea is what made Pat McGinnis a radical.
She's earlier than the movement
that we know of as Women's Liberation
and when the major women's organizations like NOW also endorse the
legalization of abortion. She's ahead of everybody. So she was pro-abortion in the most explicit way,
in a way that Planned Parenthood refused to be. And so that's why she said,
we made Planned Parenthood respectable. And McGinnis and her group do something
that's pretty revolutionary. We got together names of doctors,
and we had at the very top of this, in large letters,
this whole thing was mimeographed, large letters,
Are you pregnant?
She puts together a list, a special list, Lily Loofborough says,
that could make safe abortions possible,
even for people living in a country where it's basically illegal. That meant basically putting together a Yelp inventory of doctors
outside the country who it was safe for women to go to. This list contains not just names of doctors,
but their fees, also descriptions of the procedure. Regan says McGinnis and her group acted sort of like a feminist public health agency.
They wanted to make sure the providers followed certain standards of practice.
You have to wash your hands, you have to use sterile equipment,
you have to disinfect the room.
The U.S. woman generally was quite naive as to whether someone was a physician
or someone was a specialist.
They didn't know the questions to ask.
They knew that they were desperate.
They want to make sure that this is being done in a medically appropriate manner.
The group would try to enforce these standards by asking women to fill out surveys after the fact,
and bad actors would be removed from the list.
But sometimes, Regan says, after the fact was too late. For example, one woman who had used the list claimed later that a specialist had raped her.
The really interesting thing as, you know, somebody looking at this later is the way that they handled it.
Instead of immediately taking that doctor off the list and warning people that, you know, he had assaulted
somebody, do not see him. They sent a letter saying that they were very concerned and they
did not want him to do anything like that again. They simply admonished the doctor. Yes. And
remarkably, the group didn't remove that person from the list until a second woman claimed that Yes. there's no question what Pat McGinnis and her group were at least trying to do in their work.
This was really the way to return power to women, even if it was hard, even if it was painful,
and even if it was scary. She thought it was crucially important to actually return
some of that power to the people concerned because women had been reduced to an almost
infantile state by a medical community that thought that,
like, you know, the authorities should be making those decisions for them.
This fundamental principle Pat McGinnis lived by, advocated by, this principle that decisions about
your body belong to you and not to some doctor or lawmaker, that principle eventually becomes a given in the whole abortion rights movement.
Pat McGinnis, the maverick, becomes the mainstream.
And yet, she remains an obscure figure in the history of the reproductive rights movement.
I asked Lufborough, why was that, even after all these decades?
She was not an attention seeker or a credit seeker,
and she did not make particular common cause, to my surprise, with the feminist movement in general.
Her strategy was blunt. And I think that may have prevented her from being known as like
the activist superstar that she really was.
I mean, she was not Gloria Steinem.
Loughborough was often struck by this dichotomy in McGinnis, a fiery activist with self-effacing habits.
Someone who never really went for the camera-ready look, instead opting for clothes from thrift stores or even found on the street.
And someone who would drop unexpectedly sweet phrases on the regular,
despite being so intense. For somebody who was so openly confrontational and insistent on like
screaming abortion at people and like chasing them down with leaflets, she was just incredibly like
polite and demure and like, oh dear. And oh my goodness.
At one point, Loughborough was photographing McGinnis for the profile she wrote
and asked her to pose with anything she liked.
She went out back into her backyard and came back with a shovel and a pitchfork.
And the pitchfork was just incredible. And so she's just standing there in her front yard with this pitchfork, like reenacting American Gothic in the most incredible way.
I mean, what a symbol to choose a pitchfork for your profile.
It's Consider This from NPR. I'm Elsa Chang.