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= Negro Project = The Negro Project, conceptualized by birth control activist and eugenicist Margaret Sanger and implemented by the Birth Control Federation of America (now Planned Parenthood Federation of America), was an initiative to provide Southern black women and families with access to birth control and other forms of contraception. While the original plan for the Negro Project included educational outreach into black communities as well as the establishment of black-operated clinical resources, the project that was implemented deviated from this original design and was ultimately unsuccessful.

The Negro project lasted three years, beginning in 1939 and ending in 1942.

Sanger's Vision for the Negro Project
As a result of the National Emergency Council’s 1938 Report on the Economic Conditions of the South – a report which cited the region as the nation’s primary economic concern – national attention shifted towards fixing issues of Southern poverty. Birth control activists, including Sanger herself, believed that one way to combat Southern poverty was through increased access to birth control, and Sanger aimed to tackle Southern poverty by addressing black Southern poverty in particular.

Drawing upon her previous experience with opening a successful birth control clinic in Harlem, the Harlem Clinic, Sanger conceptualized the Negro Project. The goals of the project, as defined by Sanger in a proposal written to Albert Lasker, an American advertising executive and  philanthropist whose $20,000 donation provided much of the funding for the project, were to improve the overall quality of life for Southern blacks by reducing high infant and mother mortality rates, promoting higher education, increasing access to public health clinics, etc.

In the proposal of the Negro Project, Sanger delineated two essential components: that of educational outreach and that of clinical access. In order to facilitate educational outreach, Sanger believed it was imperative to recruit the aid of black ministers and physicians. Sanger noted that their primary responsibility would be to tour the South, dispelling misconceptions about birth control and promoting the use of future clinical resources. Additionally, being aware of the general distrust that existed between black patients and white doctors, Sanger believed that their involvement in outreach would be instrumental in ensuring continued use of the clinical resources. Then, only after a successful educational campaign, could birth control clinics be established and open for use.

The BFCA readily accepted Sanger’s proposal.

Deviation from Sanger's Plan: The BFCA's Implemented Negro Project
As it became time to implement the project, board members of the BFCA had a swaying of opinions, opting out of Sanger’s vision for the Negro Project and instead choosing to funnel money and resources into pre-existing clinics ­– clinics which were run by white physicians and nurses. Additionally, while Sanger envisioned a grander scale for the project, the BFCA concentrated their efforts in counties of South Carolina – where they employed the use of black nurses to reach out to black mothers ­– and also in Nashville, TN – where they managed to open some demonstration clinics. However, the participation rate among blacks was low while the recidivism rates were high.

= References = Margaret Sanger's Letter to Dr. CJ Gamble

Margaret Sanger's Letter to CeCe, Mrs. Damon