Lord-Heinstein, Lucile, 1903-

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<biogHist>
<p xmlns="urn:isbn:1-931666-33-4">Lucile Lord-Heinstein, gynecologist and advocate of birth control, was born in Boston, Massachusetts, on January 22, 1903, to Augusta Lord-Heinstein and Henry Heinstein. Henry Heinstein had emigrated from Russia to the United States in about 1886 and joined the United States Army. In 1895, when he was about twenty-four, he married Augusta Lord, who was then probably nineteen years old. Augusta Lord-Heinstein was a suffragist and a pioneer physiotherapist. Though most of her work was volunteer work, she did run a clinic at home during a polio epidemic sometime in the 1930s or 1940s.</p>
<p xmlns="urn:isbn:1-931666-33-4">She graduated from Boston Girls' Latin School in 1921 and spent two additional years in pre-medical study at Tufts College. With the encouragement of her mother, she entered Tufts College Medical School and earned her M.D. in 1927. During her last year of medical school, she lived at the Reformatory for Women at Framingham, Massachusetts. In 1930, following her internship at New England Hospital for Women in Roxbury (1927-1928) and residency at Memorial Hospital in Worcester (1928-1929), she set up a private practice in gynecology in Boston. However, because of overwork and exposure to tubercular colleagues, she contracted tuberculosis and was forced to close her practice after only four months.</p>
<p xmlns="urn:isbn:1-931666-33-4">In 1935, after this setback, she accepted a volunteer "refresher" position at the gynecology clinic of the New England Hospital for Women. Later that year she began working at the Mothers' Health Office (MHO) in Brookline, one of several birth control clinics sponsored by the Birth Control League of Massachusetts. The next year she became Physician-in-Charge of the MHO in Salem, and in 1937 she and her staff were arrested and convicted under an 1869 law prohibiting distribution of contraceptive advice or devices. They appealed the case, but their convictions were upheld in February 1938. After the police raided several more clinics, the remaining Mothers' Health Offices in the state were closed.</p>
<p xmlns="urn:isbn:1-931666-33-4">She continued to find ways to make birth control methods available to her patients both at New England Hospital for Women, where she remained on the staff until 1956, and later in private practice. From listening to her patients, she recognized the need for improved body awareness and education about sex and marriage. She attended marriage and family counseling seminars at Boston University and was later asked to lead several herself. She was invited to join the American Association of Marriage Counselors and served on its executive committee (1951-1954) and its nominating committee (ca. 1957), and was named a Fellow of the Association. She also served on the executive committee of the Planned Parenthood League of Massachusetts (1951-1958) and on its Board from 1959 until at least 1964. She was for many years a counselor for and then Director of the Marriage and Family Counseling Service of the Community Church of Boston, and gave speeches and lectures on marriage, family planning, and sex education to local civic and youth groups.</p>
<p xmlns="urn:isbn:1-931666-33-4">Though Lord-Heinstein never married, she helped to raise the three children of a distant relative. She has retired from private practice and lives in the Heinstein family summer home in Marshfield, Massachusetts.</p>
<citation xmlns="urn:isbn:1-931666-33-4">From the guide to the Papers, 1895-1977, (Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute)</citation>
</biogHist>

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Name Entry: Lord-Heinstein, Lucile, 1903-

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