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On June 7, 1965, Estelle Griswold, left, and Cornelia Jahncke, executive
director and president, respectively, of the Planned Parenthood League
of Connecticut, celebrated a decision by the U.S. Supreme Court that
struck down the state’s law banning the use of birth control.
That decision paved the way for later decisions, including Roe
v. Wade, which legalized abortion in the United States.
Estelle Griswold and C. Lee Buxton, center, in police headquarters on
November 10, 1961. The two were arrested after opening a clinic in
New Haven that offered birth control counseling and prescribed contraceptives
— violations of an 1879 statute that barred the use of any drug
or instrument for preventing conception.

The fight to legalize birth control had a long history in Connecticut.
In 1941 supporters of birth control took a lunch break during a legislative
hearing in Hartford.
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An arrest in New Haven, contraception
and the right to privacy
In 1961 a Yale physician joined with Planned Parenthood to challenge
a state law banning contraceptives. Their case reached the U.S. Supreme
Court and opened the door to the acceptance of contraception.
By Lori Ann Brass

When police raided a Trumbull Street clinic on November 10, 1961, it
came as no surprise. The Planned Parenthood League of Connecticut (PPLC)
had opened the clinic days earlier to offer birth control counseling
and to prescribe contraceptives — deliberate violations of an 1879
statute prohibiting the use of “any drug, medicinal article or
instrument for the purpose of preventing conception.”

Estelle Griswold, the feisty executive director of the PPLC, and C. Lee Buxton,
M.D., the medical director of the clinic and chair of the Department of Obstetrics
and Gynecology at the School of Medicine, were arrested, convicted and fined
$100 each. The PPLC had spent decades lobbying the Connecticut General Assembly
to repeal or amend the statute, one of the “Comstock
laws” promoted by anti-obscenity crusader Anthony Comstock in the late
19th century.

For 21 years the PPLC had operated only as a transport service, shuttling patients
to clinics in Rhode Island and New York, where contraception was legal. In Connecticut
married women with private physicians could often obtain birth control information
and devices, but poor women, or women without connections, could not. Two previous
attempts to challenge the statute, in 1943 and 1961, had been dismissed by the
U.S. Supreme Court, in the first case because the doctor involved lacked standing
to sue on behalf of patients, and in the second case, also involving Buxton,
because the plaintiffs had not been threatened with prosecution.

Police charged Griswold and Buxton with aiding and abetting the commission of
a crime —anyone who prescribed and advised women about
contraceptives was as culpable as the women who used them. The resulting case, Griswold
v. Connecticut, had far-reaching consequences for women’s health and
reproductive rights. “Women and families were moving eagerly to adopt birth
control across the country,”
said Susan Lloyd Yolen, vice president of public affairs and communication
for Planned Parenthood of Connecticut. “The birth control pill
came out in 1960, but Connecticut was a holdout on birth control at that
point.”

In 1965 the case reached the U.S. Supreme Court. Thomas Emerson, J.D., dean of
the Yale Law School, and Catherine Roraback, J.D. ’48,
represented the PPLC. On June 7, 1965, the court ruled 7-2 that the Connecticut
law violated the constitutional right to marital privacy. “It paved the
way for the nearly unanimous acceptance of contraception that now exists in this
country,” said Yolen.

“The ruling meant the police had no right to raid your house to
look for contraception,” said Gary L. Gross, M.D. ’65, HS ’70,
an instructor at Harvard Medical School and the medical director of federally
funded family planning clinics in Boston. Gross, who worked with Buxton
as a student and resident, said that Buxton believed in women’s
rights, the importance of contraception for all women and providing good
health care free from interference.

After Griswold, the PPLC opened clinics throughout the state,
physicians no longer feared arrest for dispensing contraception. It meant,
said Gross, that people could decide the number and spacing of their
children.

Griswold also laid the groundwork for later reproductive-rights
decisions. In its 1972 decision in Eisenstadt v. Baird, the
U.S. Supreme Court extended the right to privacy to individuals, effectively
legalizing birth control for unmarried women, said Gross. A year later,
in Roe v. Wade, the court recognized a woman’s right to
choose abortion.

“In 1957, the wife of a Yale Law School student couldn’t
obtain a diaphragm at the student health service,” said Gross. “But
when the first women were admitted to Yale College in 1969, the health
service provided lectures about birth control and where to obtain it
as part of freshmen women’s orientation.”

Lori Ann Brass is a freelance writer in Woodbridge, Conn.
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