An online guide to the collection is available. Click here.

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An online guide to the collection is available. Click here.

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An online guide to the collection is available. Click here.

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An online guide to the collection is available. Click here.

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Guttmacher succeeded Abraham Stone as Director of the Margaret Sanger Research Bureau upon his death in 1959, and was later named President of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America in 1962. As Planned Parenthood President Guttmacher built upon Stone’s contributions to the organization by publicizing the importance of family planning by in programs in Asia, Latin America, and Africa, and refocusing Planned Parenthood’s mission to tackle social problems including global overpopulation and providing health care to low-income families in the United States. He led the merger of the organization with World Population Emergency Campaign in an effort to provide voluntary family planning services to low-income communities who needed and wanted them, and to highlight the inadequacies of health care for the poor. Guttmacher also strengthened the organization’s profile in the United States by assisting the government with social policymaking during the 1960s.

Guttmacher fostered a closer relationship between the Planned Parenthood Federation of America and the International Planned Parenthood Federation by promoting efforts to educate medical professionals in developing nations about the importance of using birth control to prevent overpopulation. Guttmacher traveled the world conducting educational seminars on birth control and overpopulation and lectured to college campuses in the United States on sexual health and responsibility. He authored several books and articles in his career on family planning, overpopulation, obstetrics, pregnancy, abortion, and sexual responsibility. He lectured to local Planned Parenthood affiliates on the importance of the organization’s mission and educated members on the importance of birth control programs, and appeared before several government panels advocating the legalization of abortion in the United States. Guttmacher died of leukemia in 1974.

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An online guide to the collection is available. Click here.

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An online guide to the collection is available. Click here.

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Roe v. Wade Supreme Court decision in 1973 legalizing abortion in the United States, many physicians wrote to Guttmacher pleading for increased advocacy and education of birth control and abortions in the United States. Physicians and medical professionals were among Guttmacher’s most vocal supporters.]]> An online guide to the collection is available. Click here.

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An online guide to the collection is available. Click here.

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An online guide to the collection is available. Click here.

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An online guide to the collection is available. Click here.

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An online guide to the collection is available. Click here.

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An online guide to the collection is available. Click here.

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An online guide to the collection is available. Click here.

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An online guide to the collection is available. Click here.

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An online guide to the collection is available. Click here.

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An online guide to the collection is available. Click here.

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An online guide to the collection is available. Click here.

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An online guide to the collection is available. Click here.

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