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Thursday, July 31, 2025

July 31, 1918: An Unlicensed Doctor in Pennsylvania

Dr. Herman Spangler, age 27, of Easton, Pennsylvania was arrested in the summer of 1918 on two charges of abortion. One woman survived her ordeal, though her husband, Samuel Tauber, reported Spangler to the police. 

The other woman, silk worker Cecelia Dieber, age 20, was not so fortunate. She died on July 31 at Sacred Heart Hospital in Allentown 48 hours after being admitted. Fetal tissue had been left in her uterus and she had contracted tetanus from her injuries.

Spangler, who had just been drafted and was about to be shipped out for induction, was arrested and brought to the hospital shortly before Cecelia's death. There, both she and her mother identified him as the man who had perpetrated Cecelia's abortion on July 20. 

Cecelia's lover had been drafted and sent to France in the Army, which might have contributed to her decision to abort the pregnancy. Cecelia refused to give his name.

Spangler was also charged with practicing medicine without a license, though he claimed to be a graduate of the Metropolitan College of Chicago.

Spangler, a married father of one, pleaded guilty on all charges and was sentenced to serve 6 1/2 to 7 1/2 years in prison and faced a fine of $1,500. He died at Eastern State Penitentiary of pulmonary tuberculosis on March 3, 1920.

Sources:

July 31, 1927: The Fifth and Final Victim of Alma Dittman

Rose Savoren, age 27, travelled from her home in Leadville, Colorado to Denver with a friend named Signe Pearson. They registered at the St. Francis Hotel on July 27. Rose told Signe that she was going on a fishing trip but instead went to St. Anthony's Hospital.

On July 31, Signe and another friend, Josephine Grige, were summoned to the the hospital because Rose was dying. Rose's sister, Mary Savoren, along with a woman identified as Mrs. S. I. Godman also went to the hospital to be at the dying woman's bedside. Deputy District Attorney Segal also went to the hospital and took Rose's dying statement, implicating midwife Alma Dittman.

Rose died that day.

Police found entries about a romance with a man named Jack in Rose's diary. However, police did not believe that Jack was the father of Rose's aborted baby. They told the Fort Collins Express-Courier that they were seeking another man.

Another woman, 28-year-old Anna Parks, was also arrested but police would not say if she was connected to Rose's death or was arrested for an unrelated crime. William Lindsey was arrested and released after providing police with information about illegal abortion.

Dittman had already been identified as the abortionist responsible for the death of Mabel Duncan in 1923, Carrie McDonald in 1922, Mabelle Cannon in 1917, and Blanche Ainsley in 1912. According to the Fort Collins Express-Courier, Dittman had been released on technicalities on all of her previous abortion cases.

Evidently Dittman decided that she could not face another abortion trial. On December 15, a friend went to Dittman's home and found her lifeless on the kitchen floor. She had turned on the gas jets and asphyxiated herself. She had left notes nearby indicating that she was innocent of the crime and feared being convicted.

Watch Midwife Ends Her Own Trail of Death on YouTube.

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July 31, 1918: Abortionist Who Died in Prison

Dr. Herman Spangler, age 27, of Easton, Pennsylvania was arrested in the summer of 1918 on two charges of abortion. One woman survived her ordeal, though her husband, Samuel Tauber, reported Spangler to the police. 

The other woman, silk worker Cecelia Dieber, age 20, was not so fortunate. She died on July 31 at Sacred Heart Hospital in Allentown 48 hours after being admitted. Fetal tissue had been left in her uterus and she had contracted tetanus from her injuries.

Spangler, who had just been drafted and was about to be shipped out for induction, was arrested and brought to the hospital shortly before Cecelia's death. There, both she and her mother identified him as the man who had perpetrated Cecelia's abortion on July 20. 

Cecelia's lover had been drafted and sent to France in the Army, which might have contributed to her decision to abort the pregnancy. Cecelia refused to give his name.

Spangler was also charged with practicing medicine without a license, though he claimed to be a graduate of the Metropolitan College of Chicago.

Spangler, a married father of one, pleaded guilty on all charges and was sentenced to serve 6 1/2 to 7 1/2 years in prison and faced a fine of $1,500. He died at Eastern State Penitentiary of pulmonary tuberculosis on March 3, 1920.

Watch Abortionist Dies in Prison on YouTube.

Sources:

Wednesday, July 30, 2025

July 30, 1960: A Death Adequately Documented by a Prochoice Site

Grok AI-generated image of Claudette
According to "When Abortion was Illegal (and Deadly): Seattle's Maternal Death Toll," Seattle Civil Rights and Labor History ProjectClaudette Sayles, a 23-year-old Black woman, was a student living in Seattle in 1960. According to genealogy records and her obituary, Claudette was a mother of two and had been born in Oklahoma. Marriage records show that she was wed in 1954 at the age of 17. Her death certificate indicates that she was divorced. According to marriage records, she had married Otha Sayles when he was 24 and she was only 17. 

Mae Etta Scott, age 22, admitted to assisting in preparations for an abortion to be perpetrated in Claudette's apartment on July 30. Claudette died of acute pulmonary and congestion due to an air embolism caused by the abortion attempt. 

Police arrested Scott and she was charged with second-degree murder. The jury believed Scott's defense that nothing she had done had caused Claudette's death, so they acquitted her.


The Project cites the August 10, August 19, and December 16, 1960 issues of the Seattle Times and includes a clipping, "Murder Charge Filed in Death of Woman," from the August 10 Seattle Times which identifies Scott as a telephone operator and notes that a 20-year-old woman undergoing an abortion at the same time was being held as a material witness.


Taking this amount of care to verify and document a death is a laudable break from the usual abortion-rights web site. Usually they just copy and past a blub from another site without first verifying the story. This has led to at least two instances I know of in which there was no actual evidence that an illegal abortion was involved: Becky Bell and Pauline Shirley. To this day, Wikipedia insists that Becky died from an abortion in spite of the fact that her autopsy report shows otherwise. Kudos to the Seattle Civil Rights and Labor History Project for doing their homework.

Watch "He Cited His Sources!" on YouTube.

Tuesday, July 29, 2025

July 29, 1949: Deadly Lay Abortionist

On July 29, 1949, on the basis of a third-party referral, telegraph operator Dorothy Martin, just short of her 24th birthday, went to the Georgia home of P.D. Beigun for an abortion. Beigun was a contractor by trade. Dorothy, with the assistance of a man named Virgil Echols, age 21, had visited Beigun a few days earlier to make the arrangements.

Beigun took Dorothy into a bedroom while Echols waited in the living room. About 15 or 20 minutes later, Echols heard a sound described as a "slump," and Beigun called for him to come and help. Echols went into the other room and found Beigun supporting an unconscious Dorothy by the waist. Dorothy made a gurgling sound.

Echols helped Beigun lay Dorothy on the bed, and the men picked up her panties off the floor and put them back on her.

Echols tried to revive Dorothy, and asked Beigun what happened. Beigun indicated that he'd packed Dorothy's uterus with gauze. The men summoned police and an ambulance. While they waited, Beigun instructed Echols on what story they were to tell. They were to say that they'd been sitting in the living room with Dorothy when she'd felt faint and asked for a glass of water. Then, they'd say, Dorothy fainted and they moved her to the bed. Beigun warned Echols that he'd be in just as much trouble as Beigun himself unless he stuck with the story.

When the police arrived, Dorothy was dead. A toxicologist, who later participated in the autopsy, said that when he arrived at Beigun's home to remove Dorothy's body, he'd found her with her slip bloody and rolled up around her waist, but that there'd been no blood on the panties.

The next day the toxicologist and a physician performed an autopsy. They found that Dorothy's cervix had been dilated, discolored, and abraded, and that her injury must have been very painful. They believed that gauze had been forced into Dorothy's uterus, even though no gauze was present at autopsy, because her injuries were consistent with this scenario. They also concluded that Dorothy had gone into shock and died within a few minutes of her injury. Dorothy had been in good health, with no abnormalities of her heart, lungs, or kidneys and no history of fainting.

The fetus appeared to be about three to four months of gestation. It was removed at autopsy, along with Dorothy's damaged uterus, and placed in a glass jar to be presented as evidence of Dorothy's pregnancy, gestational state, and injuries. An obstetrician testified that Dorothy's baby hadn't been killed by the abortion attempt but had died due to her death.

Three days after Dorothy's death, medical supplies and broken packages of gauze bandages were found in Beigun's home and collected as evidence.

In trial, it came out that Echols had previously brought his own wife to Beigun for an abortion. That abortion took place in June, 1948. Echols had paid Beigun $65. Echols had dropped his wife off for the abortion and picked her up later to take her home. She became sick with nausea and pain, and Echols pulled a 6-inch rubber tube and about 60 feet of gauze out of his wife's uterus. Her pain became so great that Echols called a doctor, who had the sick woman brought to a hospital. Her temperature was 104 degrees. She was provided with penicillin and a blood transfusion. Beigun visited her at the hospital, asking why she'd not returned to him for treatment rather than going to somebody else.

Documents don't reveal why Echols, whose own wife had very nearly died under Beigun's care, brought another woman to the same man for his dubious services.

Beigun's trial was delayed due to his stomach problems and not being in "a mental and physical condition as to be able to confer rationally with his counsel." Ten of the 12 jurors hearing Beigun's case voted for the death penalty before settling on life in prison during an hour of deliberation. Beigun lost his appeal.

In a particularly tragic coincidence, another young woman, 'Nita Brown, died the following September from complications of an abortion shortly before Beigun's trial. 'Nita lived at the same address as Dorothy, though it's not clear if they were roommates or just lived in the same building.

Watch "Why is Horrible Good Enough?" on YouTube.

Sources:

July 29, 1985: Failure to Diagnose Proves Fatal

Twenty-six-year-old Yvette Poteat had an abortion performed by Dr. Marion Douglas Dorn Jr. at The Ladies Clinic in Charleston, South Carolina on July 16, 1985. A lawsuit filed by her surviving mother and sister says that Dorn did not examine the tissue he removed from Yvette's uterus, and did not notify Yvette that the lab report showed no fetal or placental tissue in the specimen.

Marion Dorn Jr.
On July 27, Yvette experienced "sudden, sharp, constant lower abdominal pains," and was taken to a hospital by her fiancée. She was admitted to the emergency room, where she informed the doctors about the abortion. She was mistakenly diagnosed as having Pelvic Inflammatory Disease, was given medication, and was discharged after several hours with instructions to seek follow-up care in two days.

Throughout July 28, Yvette experienced continued pain. She called the hospital but "was instructed not to return but to give the medication a chance to work."

Early in the morning of July 29, Yvette collapsed at home. She was taken by ambulance to the hospital. She went into cardiac arrest due to a ruptured ectopic pregnancy that both Dorn and the hospital staff had failed to diagnose, and was pronounced dead 6:15 a.m.

The lawsuit noted that Yvette's mother "suffered the loss of the financial support of her daughter, extreme mental shock and suffering, wounded feelings, extreme grief and sorrow, has lost the love and affection and companionship of a loving and wonderful daughter, has been deprived of the use and comfort of her society."

The suit against Dorn, the clinic, the hospital and hospital doctors won a small $23,000 plaintiff verdict in 1987.

Dorn died on July 26, 2003 at the age of 52.

Watch Multiple Opportunities Missed at YouTube.

Source: Charleston County Court of Common Pleas Case No. 86-CP-10-3283 and 86- CP-10-3284

July 29, 1941: Two Doctors, One Dead Woman

 

On the morning of Tuesday, July 29, 1941, 34-year-old Agnes Vilhemina Pearson of White Plains, New York was admitted to Grasslands Hospital in Mount Pleasant, New York in a state of semi-consciousness.

Eight hours later, she was dead. An autopsy determined the cause of death to be peritonitis caused by an abortion.

Agnes's husband, Herbert Pearson, told police that Agnes had gone to Dr. Nathan Schwartz and that he, assisted by Dr. Samuel Schwartz, made three abortion attempts perpetrated on July 11, July 26, and July 28. Samuel Schwartz's role appeared to have been administering anesthetics.

Dr. Nathan Schwartz, age 55, and Dr. Samuel Schwartz (not related), age 68, were charged with first degree manslaughter in Agnes' death. The Grand Jury heard evidence from Agnes' husband, four hospital doctors, three nurses, state police, and a laboratory worker. 

Some sources say that both doctors turned themselves in, while others say that police went to their offices to arrest them. Their bail was set at $5,000 each. I can't find any evidence that the case actually went to trial.

I can't find much background on Agnes. According to 1940 census records, the children were approximately 6 and 11 years old. Agnes had only completed elementary school. Herbert was a naturalized citizen, born in Sweden. Like Agnes, he had only an elementary-school education. He was self-employed.

Watch Were They Ever Prosecuted? on YouTube.

Sources: 

Monday, July 28, 2025

July 28, 1943: Transfusions and Antibiotics Can't Save Naomi

 Florence Naomi Congdon, age 21, was the wife of Donald Congdon, a sailor from Denver, stationed in Norman, Oklahoma. On July 27, 1943, Dr. Andrew Young examined Naomi and noted that she was pregnant, and also that she had an ingrown toenail that was infected. The infection, he said, was "minor". 

Naomi told her husband that she wanted to "do something" about the pregnancy. She even admitted to him that she had ingested turpentine to try to cause an abortion, but had vomited it back up. Donald objected to the idea of an abortion. 

On August 16, Donald found a note from his wife, telling him that she was at the home of Mrs. Lena Griffin Smith, a 63-year-old maternity nurse in Oklahoma City. Donald went there and found his wife in great pain. He called a medical officer at the base, who went with him to the house and found Naomi so sick that he told Donald to have Naomi brought to the base hospital. Donald called an ambulance and rode with his wife. 

Police raided Smith's practice at her residence at 2134 Harden Drive. News said that Smith was caught "literally red-handed," bloody from an abortion she had just completed on a 23-year-old Oklahoma City woman who was recuperating in bed. The police made Smith return the woman's abortion fee of $200 (just over $3,000 in 2020 dollars). They took the woman to a hospital. Later that night she gave birth to an infant that lived little more than an hour. Smith was charged with first degree manslaughter for the baby's death.

Smith confessed that she had been operating an abortion business for about 15 years in a house described as "luxurious." She had an accomplice, Mrs. Pearl Green, who was also a nurse. Smith herself had attended medical school for two years. 

On August 19, a Navy doctor examined Naomi and found she had a fever of 103 from an infection that appeared to have started in her uterus. He administered sulfa drugs and blood transfusions. Despite the efforts of the Navy doctors, Naomi died of septicemia on August 28. Her body was taken home to Colorado for burial.

Smith's defense claimed that Naomi had already been feverish when she'd come for care, and that the fatal infection had originated in the ingrown toenail. 

A jury found Smith guilty of manslaughter and recommended a 10-year sentence. She was also charged with attempting to conceal the death of a child under the age of two after police found the body of an infant who had been born alive during an abortion attempt on its 17-year-old mother at Smith's home before perishing.

Even after her incarceration, Smith continued to insist that she ran two maternity homes and a home for unwed mothers but never performed abortions. The parole board recommended release for her in August of 1950.

Watch the video on YouTube.

Additional sources:
  • "'Motherly' Type is Held as Chief of Abortion Mill," Daily News, October 10, 1943
  • "Mrs. Smith Found Guilty," The Norman (OK) Transcript, October 21, 1943
  • "Mrs. Lena Smith Gets Prison Term," Sapulpa (OK) Herald, October 21, 1943
  • "Appeal Is Lost By Abortionist," Daily Oklahoman, December 5, 1946
  • "Recommended For Parole In 1943 Abortion Case," Okmulgee (OK) Daily Times, August 24, 1950

July 28, 1989 and 1990: The Black Lives that Don't Seem to Matter

 Blacks comprise about 12 percent of the US population, yet Black woman are sold roughly 25 percent of abortions. More disturbing is this fact: Black women account for at least 50 percent of known abortion deaths. 

A smiling Black teenage girl, with her hair in a short afro. She wears a medium-toned shirt with a high, scalloped collar.
Charisse Ards

This bears repeating: A young Black woman is twice as likely to be sold an abortion as a young white woman, and once she gets on the abortion table, she is at least twice as likely to suffer fatal complications as a white woman. More to the point, a Black woman coming of age in the US is at least four times more likely to die from abortion complications than a white woman coming of age.

Charisse Kay Ards was 20 years old, single, and a mother of one. According to Life Dynamics, Charisse died July 28, 1989, in a hospital in Arapahoe County, Colorado from a pelvic infection after a legal abortion.

Mary Ann Dancy
Thirty-two-year-old Mary Ann Dancy was a mother of five children ranging in age from 2 to 17 when she went to Fleming Center in North Raleigh, North Carolina for a safe and legal abortion on July 27, 1990. She was accompanied by a male friend and her sister, Carolyn.

The abortion was performed by Clarence J. Washington at around 4:00 p.m. He documented no complications. "She seemed all right," Carolyn told the Raleigh News & Observer. "She walked to the car."

After Mary Ann went home, she took a bath and went to bed. However, she bled heavily and Washington did not return her calls. The next day, July 28, she was taken by ambulance to Halifax Memorial Hospital. She died that night during emergency surgery from hemorrhage due to a lacerated cervix.


Fleming Center had been the first freestanding abortion clinic in North Raleigh when it was originally founded by Dr. Paul Fleming. When he died in 1989, Raleigh Women's Health Organization bought the practice, which was purchased by Washington shortly thereafter. He closed it in 1991. He faced two more lawsuits in the year after Mary Ann's death, including one woman who was hospitalized for ten days for uterine lacerations. Another woman sued after a failed abortion attempt by Washington.

Planned Parenthood indicated that they had stopped referring women to Washington when they were unable to verify that he had admitting privileges at any local hospitals.

Watch "Black Women Die Disproportionately" on YouTube.

New Sources: 

Saturday, July 26, 2025

July 26, 1884: Packed in Ice and Sent Home

  Big Words

Dr. Ira T. Richmond was a grandiose man. Born in New York City on March 7, 1838, he claimed to have graduated from the New York Medical College at the age of just 18. He was, however, unable to name any of the professors under which he had studied medicine.  But what did that matter? If you believed Richmond, he could cure smallpox in six hours, dropsy in one day, and cure a variety of other ailments in times ranging from a mere two minutes to about 12 hours. 

He also claimed to be extremely wealthy, saying that he did not consider his practice to be prospering unless it was bringing in $400 to $600 per day (c. $12,000 - $18,000 in 2023). He told people that after his first wife had died he had spent six years travelling through Canada and the US as a way of coping with his grief, carrying $40,000 to $50,000 with him ($1.25 million - $1.5 million in 2023) and staying in the best hotels. He also told his landlady, a widow named Carrie Lerch, that he had six children living in New York, each of whom he had gifted $15,000 (nearly half a million in 2023) to start them out in life.

He didn't do so well for himself when he moved to Lockport, New York, in 1883 at the age of 45. He set up a sanitarium which, as one newspaper put it, the place "died for want of patronage." This might be due to the fact that, as the Chicago Inter Ocean reported on July 30, 1884, Richmond "had a dubious character among physicians." 

Then he beguiled a young widow named Sarah Platts. The two married and lived at the sanitarium at the corner of High and Cottage. Evidently he took Sarah for her money before dumping her and moving on to other women he could milk for ready cash, marrying them if necessary without benefit of divorcing previous wives.

His character was indeed extremely dubious in many ways.

Lizzie

Some time in the summer of 1884, Lizzie Cook, a 25-year-old domestic servant, confided in her sister that she was pregnant. Either the sister or the sister's husband, William Bowen, took Lizzie to Richmond's practice, where she was examined. Richmond diagnosed her with dropsy and blood poisoning. Two days later, she was put to bed at her sister's house at about 11:00 at night, and remained there sick for nearly three weeks. Richmond attended to her on a daily basis, sometimes visiting more than once a day, during that time. She died suddenly on the afternoon of Saturday, July 26, 1884.

By that evening, her body had already been packed in ice and taken to her parents' home. She was buried on Monday morning after a large funeral. "The secrecy in getting her body removed to her home created suspicion," so her body was exhumed that afternoon for an autopsy.

A post-mortem examination revealed that Lizzie had died from abortion injuries. The coroner's jury summarized:

"That Lizzie Cook died at the residence of Wm. H. Bowen, of this city, between the hours of 1 and 2 o'clock in the afternoon of July 26, 1884, and that she came to her death from an abortion produced upon her, and from other causes unknown to the jury, and that the abortion was performed with the full knowledge of Mrs. Bowen, sister of the deceased."

Arrest and Trial

Richmond was charged with murder, a circumstance he dealt with calmly. Lizzie's sister, on the other hand, was held as an accomplice and collapsed in tears. "She was attended in court by her husband and father, and the parting between them as she was led away was very affecting."

Lizzie's sister was released on bail on August 18.

Richmond pleaded not guilty, insisting that Lizzie had not been pregnant when she died and had died of dropsy and blood poisoning. "The evidence is strong against him, however," said the July 30, 1884 Cincinnati Enquirer. Sentiment against Richmond was so strong there fears that he would be lynched.

During the trial, according to the September 5, 1884 St. Louis Daily Globe-Democrat, "a well-dressed and modest appearing lady, named Mrs. Butler, and her daughter, the former aged about 50 and the latter 20years old," testified before the Grand Jury before returning to their home in Smith Falls, Ontario. Mrs. Butler testified that she was Richmond's wife, and that his name was Ira Richmond Butler. He had deserted her in Canada about ten years earlier, "and even then was engaged in reprehensible practices."

So evidently he had been an abortionist in Canada as well.

Conviction and Sentence

Richmond was convicted of first degree manslaughter on October 21, 1884. The jury recommended mercy. After requesting and being denied a new trial, Richmond/Butler was sentenced to six years of hard labor at Auburn Prison.

According to New York prison records, Richmond aka Butler entered prison on November 14, 1884 to serve a 6-year sentence. He earned a commutation of 22 months and was released on January 14, 1889, having served 4 years and 2 months.

Epilogue

Ira Richmond Butler won himself a profile in the November 17, 1891 Buffalo Morning Express after his arrest in Buffalo for counterfeiting. "The police here understand that in Buffalo, Rochester, Watertown and other cities he pursued the same means of livelihood as here, namely, criminal malpractice [abortion] and working the pocket-books of susceptible women whom he fascinated by his agreeable manners and unctuous professions of exalted piety."

Richmond -- rather, Butler -- reportedly was a pious church-goer on Sundays and an abortionist on other days in his dubious sanitariums. That is, when he wasn't committing bigamy, marrying women to bilk them of their money.

As the Inter-Ocean said, he was a dubious character.

Sources:

July 26, 1877: Doctor Flees as Woman Dies

On July 25, 1877, Mrs. Augusta Boschen left her home on Curtis Street in Chicago, telling her husband, John, that she was going to the drug store.

Instead, she went to the home and practice of Dr. Muleck at 224 Fulton Street. 

At some point John, who worked as a cooper, learned that she had gone to Muleck's practice to procure an abortion. At around 4:00 on the morning of July 26 he went to Muleck's house.

Muleck was nowhere to be found, so John forced his way in and found his wife dead in a bed. He summoned the police.

Augusta's cause of death was indeed an abortion, as determined by the coroner.

Dr. Muleck had fled to avoid arrest. He had left a letter for his wife saying that he had not performed the abortion, but had just provided Augusta with the instruments, "she being so bashful and modest as not to allow him to do the work." He said that when Augusta went into convulsions, he'd concluded that she was going to die and skipped town. 

"The scoundrel of a doctor has not yet been caught, and hence the evidence was meagre," noted the August 4, 1877 Chicago Tribune. I've been unable to find any further information.

Watch Doc Skips Town as Patient Dies on YouTube.

Sources: 

Sunday, July 20, 2025

July 20, 1913: Names Doctor on Deathbed

On July 20, 1913, Mrs. Emma Chandler, age 20, died suddenly from complications of a criminal abortion perpetrated the previous day. In a deathbed statement, she named Dr. J.A. Richmond as her abortionist.

Her husband, Ora, a Denver grocery clerk, notified the police immediately after Emma's death. An investigation revealed that a friend had accompanied Emma to Richmond's practice after finishing work at the offices of a lumber company. After the abortion she was driven home.

Her husband returned from work and found Emma very weak. Overnight she became more and more ill. Around noon she realized that she was dying and sent for a neighbor, who she begged to pray for her. The neighbor remained by Emma's bedside, knitting and praying.


Some time in the afternoon Emma confessed about the abortion to her husband because she didn't want another child, feeling that her 3-year-old son was enough. Mr. Chandler sent for a doctor who lived across the street, but there was nothing he could do for her.

When Mr. Chandler spoke to police, he told them that several months earlier Emma had also undergone a criminal abortion and taken desperately ill. "At that time he had threatened to leave her if she ever dared undergo another such operation, and she had promised him never to risk her life again.

Richmond was arrested in Denver for her death. During the inquest he said that he hadn't known that Emma was pregnant, but was operating on her, at her request, to relieve gynecological pain that he'd unsuccessfully treated with medications.

Note, please, that with issues such as doctors not using proper aseptic techniques, lack of access to blood transfusions and antibiotics, and overall poor health to begin with, there was likely little difference between the performance of a legal abortion and illegal practice, and the aftercare for either type of abortion was probably equally unlikely to do the woman much, if any, good. For more information about early 20th Century abortion mortality, see Abortion Deaths 1910-1919.

For more on pre-legalization abortion, see The Bad Old Days of Abortion

Sources:





Saturday, July 19, 2025

July 19, 1960: Amateur Abortion Proves Fatal

Madge Morton
Madge Nancy Morton, age 21, was pronounced dead on arrival at St. Francis Hospital in Greenville, South Carolina on July 19, 1960. The young bookkeeper was a native of Kingsport, Tennessee.

Strangely, her death certificate listed her cause of death as "undetermined by gross microscopic and analytical studies." No manner of death was indicated at all.

Clearly, though, the death was due to an abortion. Two men -- Larry Darr Meeks, age 27, and William David Hellams, age 29 -- were each sentenced to prison. Hellams was evidently Madge's romantic interest, since his attorney described hi mas "very much devoted to the girl." He had reached out to Meeks, who reportedly had what the Greenville News called "some familiarity with the procedure for performing an abortion."

The motive for the abortion might well have been that Hellams was a husband and father.

Madge got off work at 1 pm on that July day, met up with Meeks and Hellams, and went to the house of a naturopathic physician. This physician refused to participate in an abortion, so Hellams went to a hospital supply company to purchase some sort of instrument and to a drugstore for several other items. 

The three then went to an apartment where one of Madge's co-workers lived and the men made some attempts to abort Madge's two or three month unborn baby.

Marge lost consciousness. Meeks and Hellams tried for a while to revive her. when their efforts failed, they returned to the naturopath, who instructed them to take Madge to a hospital. 

Which led to Madge being pronounced dead on arrival at 5:50 pm.

An autopsy found that Madge had a high level of barbiturates in her blood. It seems to have been the drugs, rather than any physical trauma, that caused Madge's death. 

Sources:

Friday, July 18, 2025

July 18, 1979: Dead Before Day's End

 Geneva Colton, age 21, a mother of two, wanted to stay off welfare, her friend, Joy Fisher, told the Atlanta Constitution. She was a full time meter maid and school crossing guard for the Cochran, GA, police department and worked part-time at a restaurant. "She just felt she could not support another child without going back on welfare." Geneva, Joy said, had nearly completed her studies to get her GED and would have taken thjude last two tests in September. "She wanted that certificate so she could become a certified policewoman."

Joy supported Geneva's choice, and drove her friend to Northside Family Planning Service in Atlanta on July 18, 1979. They left Cochran at 6:10 a.m. and talked about Geneva's two little boys during the trip. They were about ten minutes late for the 9 a.m. appointment. Joy even helped Geneva to pay for the procedure, performed at 10 weeks of pregnancy.

"She was a unique individual in that she was a young black woman with two children who could have had a relatively carefree life on welfare. But she elected to fight it, and she was pulling herself up by herself with no help really from anybody much except the friends around her who loved her," Joy said.

It was 4:00 p.m. before Geneva was discharged. "She was obviously in pain coming back, and I stopped once to buy a pillow to make her more comfortable," Joy said. "She appeared to be having abdominal cramping, which they had told her she would experience."

Joy dropped Geneva off at a friend's house in Cochran at about 7:30 p.m. About an hour later, Joy said, the friend called and said that Geneva had been taken to the emergency room at Bleckley County Hospital.

A hospital spokesman told the Constitution that Geneva had no vital signs on arrival. She was pronounced dead at 9:30 p.m. after attempts to resuscitate her failed. The hospital contacted the Centers for Disease Control to report Geneva's death. Geneva was the fifth legal abortion death reported in Georgia since the 1973 Supreme Court decision, Roe vs. Wade, which struck down nearly all limits on abortion practice in the United States. Dr. George Rubin of the CDC said that those five deaths could be considered a "rash" of deaths.

The autopsy found that Geneva's uterus had been perforated. She had bled to death. A jury awarded Geneva's two young sons, ages 4 and 7 at the time of her death, $225,000 in a malpractice suit. ($600,000 in 2020 dollars.) Both the clinic and Dr. Lawrence Cohen were named in the suit. The boys ended up under the guardianship of the Georgia Department of Family and Children Services.

Northside was eventually sued by their malpractice insurer because they'd allowed one of their abortionists to continue to perform surgery even though his manual dexterity had deteriorated due to multiple sclerosis. The suit by the insurer also alleged failure to meet state health standards, failure to have enough nurses on duty, failure to have proper on-call procedures, and lack of a professional director of medical services.

The clinic where Geneva's fatal abortion was performed seems to be the same clinic where Catherine Pierce underwent her fatal abortion in 1989.

Geneva's death also highlights a sad reality: According to the Alan Guttmacher Institute, a Black woman is nearly twice as likely to end up on the abortion table than a white woman, and once she's on that table she's significantly more likely to end up dead. According to the Centers for Disease Control, about 35% of abortions are performed on white women and about 38% on Black women.  Of the 95 legal abortion deaths for which I've been able to determine the woman's race, 47% were Black woman and only 30% were white women. (Asian women were 3% and Hispanic women 19%.) 



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New Sources on Geneva's death:

July 18, 1979: Safe and Legal Gas Gangrene

Gail Ann Vroman had been a very active student at Huntington North High School in Huntington, Indiana. She was active in gymnastics and track as well as the school's Historical Society.

After graduation, Gail got a job as a beautician.

At the age of 20, in the summer of 1979, Gail discovered that she was pregnant. On Saturday, July 13, her boyfriend drove her to Fort Wayne Indiana to undergo an abortion. Gail was about ten weeks into her pregnancy.

The abortion at Fort Wayne Women's Health Organization was not performed by a local doctor but rather by Taskin Ratharathorn from New York. 

Opposition to Regulations

The clinic had only been in operation since June 10 of 1978 and was part of a chain with facilities in Florida, Georgia, New Jersey, New York, and Wisconsin as well. 

In August of 1978 the clinic joined another Indiana abortion clinic, Women's Pavilion, in its bid to block the state from requiring abortion clinics to adhere to the same standards as other ambulatory surgery centers, saying that increasing licensing requirements would effectively shut down every abortion clinic in the state, despite the fact that one of the four Indianapolis abortion clinics, Indianapolis Women's Center, was licensed under the guidelines. Another clinic, Meridian Women's Clinic, had been licensed but dropped its license after Roe on the grounds that the decision forbade any but the most superficial state oversight.

Janet Craig, director of hospital and institutional services for the Indiana Board of Health, told the Indianapolis Star, "We have no power of enforcement right now. There is no clarification of the law." 

Indiana had originally attempted to require that abortions be performed in a licensed facility or hospital, but that requirement was struck down by the Federal Court decision Arnold vs. Sendak in 1976.  

The provisions that the Women's Pavilion and Women's Health Organization found too onerous included a requirement that the facility have a transfer agreement to a local hospital for treatment of injuries.

Dr. James Brillhart, co-owner of Indianapolis Women's Center, told the Indianapolis Sun that meeting the requirements increased capital costs, including $1,000 for a backup generator, and led to an increased cost of $20 - $25 per abortion. (That's roughly $90 - $114 in 2022.) Brillhart noted that "according to the Supreme Court, you can perform an abortion in a taxicab, if it's done by a licensed physician." He felt that the licensing requirements were medically necessary. He asserted that licensing could keep "unscrupulous individuals, who are just one step ahead of criminal abortionists" from practicing in Indiana.

"If people were not unscrupulous, if good doctors would set these up and run them, if they were viewed as medical facilities rather than investments, regulation wouldn't be necessary. I don't like to see legislation restricting good physicians' practices, but the wrong people take advantage of abortion, and so we need licensing.

The clinics fighting licensing requirements won their case.

Gail's Sickness and Death

Within a few hours after the abortion, Gail showed signs of sickness. At the recommendation of clinic staff, her boyfriend drove her to nearby Lutheran Hospital where she was admitted under the care of Dr. Ramesh Bhat. 

In spite of dialysis performed to try to make up for Gail's deteriorating kidney function, she died at 11:22 am on Wednesday, July 18.  The coroner ruled that the death was caused by clostridium perfringens, or "gas gangrene," which had caused her blood cells to deteriorate and her kidneys to shut down.

Gail's death was investigated by the Centers for Disease Control as well as Allen County health officials. Investigators contacted other women who had undergone abortions at the clinic. I've been unable to find the results of any investigation, and the CDC gave very short shrift to abortion surveillance in general and abortion deaths in particular for 1979 and 1980. Thus there is no way of knowing if the facility fell short in its care of Gail or if her death was just a fluke.

Watch "Slipshod Care or Just a Fluke" on YouTube.

Sources: