National Committee on Maternal Health

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The Committee on Maternal Health was organized in New York City in 1923 by Robert L. Dickinson (1861-1950). After obtaining financial backing from several society women, Dickinson recruited physicians for the Committee to sponsor medical investigation of contraception, infertility, spontaneous abortion, and related issues. In 1930 "National" was added to its name, and the role of the Committee shifted to that of a clearing house for information on these issues; the Committee sponsored a series of monographs which were to serve as a handbook for doctors. The shift occurred because Dickinson was unsuccessful in obtaining sufficient data from hospitals for their research, and also failed to gain support from the medical profession for a clinical investigation through Margaret Sanger's Clinical Research Bureau. Dickinson, however, did associate himself with Sanger's Clinic in a private capacity after 1930, and was to serve as mediator through whom organized medicine made its peace with the birth control movement. Dickinson died in 1950. The Committee's office at the New York Academy of Medicine was closed in 1955, shortly before the resignation of the executive director. The Population Council was its successor organization; the data-gathering section remained in New York and the Council itself located in Princeton, N.J.

From the description of Records, 1923-1959. (Harvard University). WorldCat record id: 281430084

The Committee on Maternal Health was organized in New York City in 1923 by the renowned gynecologist Robert Latou Dickinson for the purpose of sponsoring the study of contraception and related issues. At first Dickinson, who had long been interested in problems of human sexuality, directed the efforts of the Committee toward taking medical control of contraception away from Margaret Sanger's Birth Control Clinical Research Bureau and the American Birth Control League. With this aim in view and with help from the Rockefeller-funded Bureau of Social Hygiene, the Maternity Research Council was created under the auspices of the Committee. Eventually, however, Dr. Dickinson and Mrs. Sanger became the mediators through whom the medical profession and the birth control movement were able to cooperate and the Clinical Research Bureau survived under the direction of Dr. Hannah Stone.*

In 1930 the Committee on Maternal Health's name changed to National Committee on Maternal Health and its role shifted to that of publisher and clearing-house for public information and education. At the same time Dickinson and other members of the Committee not only served in an advisory capacity to the birth control movement at large, they also were concerned with various aspects of maternal and child welfare, among them sexual relations and marriage counseling. The Committee's sponsorship of contraceptive research received a boost in 1934 when the Standards Program was developed through the help of Dr. Clarence J. Gamble. Under this program delivery and testing of contraceptives in the. South came to be carried out on an extensive scale in the later years of the 1930s. During the 1940s the Committee focused on such timely issues as women war workers and abortion studies.

By the time of Dickinson's death in 1950 the Committee save for Gamble's Standards Program was virtually inactive. Its offices at the New York Academy of Medicine were closed in 1955 and the work of the Standards Program was transferred a few years later to the newly-established, Pathfinder Fund (a Gamble family foundation). Some of the Committee's other work was subsequently taken up by the Population Council.

*For more on the inter-relations between the Committee and the birth control movement as well as its subsequent history, see James Reed, From Private Vice to Public Virtue; the Birth Control Movement and American Society since 1830 (New York: Basic Books, Inc., 1978).

From the guide to the Records, 1923-1959, (Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine. Center for the History of Medicine.)

Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
creatorOf Records, 1923-1959 Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine
referencedIn Papers, 1900-1969 Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America‏
referencedIn Family Planning Oral History Project. Records, 1909-1984 (inclusive), 1973-1977 (bulk). Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America‏
referencedIn Gamble, Clarence James, 1894-. Papers of Clarence J. Gamble, 1920-1966 (bulk). Harvard University, Medical School, Countway Library
referencedIn Klemperer, Paul, 1887-1964. Paul Klemperer papers, [1920-1960]. New York Academy of Medicine
referencedIn Margaret Sanger Research Bureau. Margaret Sanger Research Bureau Records 1873-1973 (bulk 1917-1969) Smith College, Neilson Library
creatorOf National Committee on Maternal Health. Records, 1923-1959. Harvard University, Medical School, Countway Library
referencedIn Beam, Lura, 1887-. Papers, 1900-1969 (inclusive). Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America‏
referencedIn Interviews, 1973-1977 Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America‏
referencedIn Margaret Sanger Research Bureau Records MS 320., 1873-1973, 1917-1969 Sophia Smith Collection
referencedIn Papers, 1881-1972 (inclusive), 1883-1950 (bulk) Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine
referencedIn Dickinson, Robert Latou, 1861-. Papers, 1881-1972 (inclusive), 1883-1950 (bulk). Harvard University, Medical School, Countway Library
Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
associatedWith Beam, Lura, 1887- person
associatedWith Birth Control Clinical Research Bureau (New York, N.Y.) corporateBody
associatedWith Bureau of Social Hygiene, Inc. corporateBody
associatedWith Clinic Group corporateBody
associatedWith Committee of Maternal Health corporateBody
associatedWith Committee of the N.Y Obstetrical Society corporateBody
associatedWith Committee on Maternal Health. corporateBody
associatedWith Dickinson, Robert Latou, 1861- person
associatedWith Family Planning Oral History Project family
associatedWith Family Planning Oral History Project. corporateBody
associatedWith Gamble, Clarence James, 1894- person
associatedWith Klemperer, Paul, 1887-1964. person
associatedWith Kozmak, George W., 1873-1954. person
associatedWith LURA ELLA BEAM person
associatedWith Margaret Sanger Research Bureau corporateBody
associatedWith Maternal Health, Inc. General Journal corporateBody
correspondedWith Maternal Research Council corporateBody
correspondedWith Maternity Research Council corporateBody
associatedWith Medical Advisary Group corporateBody
correspondedWith National Committee on Maternal Health Clinic Group corporateBody
correspondedWith National Research Council corporateBody
associatedWith National Research Council Committee on Human Reproduction corporateBody
associatedWith National Research Council (U.S.). Committee on Human Reproduction. corporateBody
associatedWith New York Obstetrical Society. corporateBody
associatedWith N.Y. Obstetrical Society corporateBody
correspondedWith R. L. Dickinson person
associatedWith Robert L. Dickinson person
associatedWith Sanger, Margaret, 1879-1966. person
correspondedWith the American Congress on Obstetrics and Gynecology corporateBody
Place Name Admin Code Country
Subject
Abortion
Birth control
Contraception
Women in war
Occupation
Activity

Corporate Body

Active 1923

Active 1959

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