30.05.2014 Views

The Pre-Roe Pro-Life Movement in Minnesota and New York

The Pre-Roe Pro-Life Movement in Minnesota and New York

The Pre-Roe Pro-Life Movement in Minnesota and New York

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

through books <strong>and</strong> articles set aside for him; many of the articles <strong>and</strong> publications found<br />

<strong>in</strong> this Mayo stack were the same ones found <strong>in</strong> the papers of M<strong>in</strong>nesota’s top pro- <strong>and</strong><br />

anti-abortion activists. Various actors here were <strong>in</strong>formed by the same (often medical)<br />

publications, yet were led to very different conclusions. 14<br />

Blackmun was certa<strong>in</strong>ly <strong>in</strong>fluenced by the <strong>in</strong>stitution he knew so well; the Mayo<br />

Cl<strong>in</strong>ic has been the country’s forerunner <strong>in</strong> medical care, research, <strong>and</strong> teach<strong>in</strong>g for over<br />

a century. 15 Patients <strong>and</strong> doctors travel from across the globe to visit Mayo; author Lucy<br />

Wilder describes the cl<strong>in</strong>ic’s average patient as “a cross-section of everyone <strong>in</strong> the<br />

world.” 16<br />

<strong>The</strong> worldl<strong>in</strong>ess <strong>and</strong> significant presence of the medical profession <strong>in</strong><br />

M<strong>in</strong>nesota helps expla<strong>in</strong> the dom<strong>in</strong>ant usage of medical rhetoric <strong>in</strong> the abortion debate.<br />

<strong>The</strong>se doctors made the medical advancements that spurred pro-abortion sympathizers to<br />

action, <strong>and</strong> these Mayo doctors <strong>and</strong> Mayo-affiliated University of M<strong>in</strong>nesota professors<br />

wrote articles <strong>and</strong> letters to establish the vocabulary for the debate. All this, taken<br />

together with the high abortion approval rate (3 out of every 4) of therapeutic abortions<br />

by cl<strong>in</strong>ic boards, created an atmosphere quite supportive of the Supreme Court decision<br />

Blackmun would write <strong>in</strong> 1973. 17 <strong>The</strong> M<strong>in</strong>nesota abortion debate had implications not<br />

only for the state’s own residents, but also clearly connected to a drastic <strong>and</strong> last<strong>in</strong>g<br />

impact on the national scale. This cont<strong>in</strong>uous M<strong>in</strong>nesota story is tightly knit <strong>in</strong>to the<br />

nation’s medical, social, <strong>and</strong> even judicial history.<br />

14 For example, Blackmun consulted the March 1971 American Journal for Public Health issue<br />

<strong>and</strong> a Wash<strong>in</strong>gton Post article that asserted “2 out of 3 Americans th<strong>in</strong>k abortion should be a matter for<br />

decision solely between a woman <strong>and</strong> her physician.” Ibid., 90-91. I found both publications <strong>in</strong> the MCCL<br />

Historical Files <strong>and</strong> the Kather<strong>in</strong>e Taylor Wood Papers.<br />

15 Alan E. Nourse, Inside the Mayo Cl<strong>in</strong>ic, (<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>: McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1979), 23;<br />

Lucy Wilder, <strong>The</strong> Mayo Cl<strong>in</strong>ic, (<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>: Harcourt, Brace <strong>and</strong> Company, 1947), 26.<br />

16 Wilder, 58.<br />

17 “Doctors Estimate 3 of 4 Abortions Accepted at Mayo,” 19 May 1970, M<strong>in</strong>neapolis Star, Box 1,<br />

Folder: <strong>New</strong>spaper Clipp<strong>in</strong>gs 1967-1970, Governor Harold Lev<strong>and</strong>er Papers.<br />

9

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!