Griswold and Barrett in Your Bedroom
Griswold and Barrett in Your Bedroom
You've heard of Roe v. Wade, but are you familiar with Griswold v. Connecticut?The country was a different place in 1965. The term “sexual harassment” wouldn't be coined for another decade. Marital rape was legal. Women could be fired if they got pregnant. And a dusty old 1879 law made birth control illegal for anyone to use in Connecticut. In 1961, Estelle Griswold, director of the Planned Parenthood League of Connecticut, and Dr. C. Lee Buxton, Chair of the Department of Obstetrics at Yale University School of Medicine, opened a facility in New Haven, CT, that provided information and prescribed contraceptives for married women. Ten days later, Griswold and Buxton were arrested, then prosecuted and found guilty in a case that would eventually make it to the Supreme Court.The Warren Court decided 7-2 in favor of Griswold and Buxton. Justice William O. Douglas wrote in his decision that while there's no single guarantee of privacy in the Constitution, it was certainly implicit in the spirit of other enumerated rights, such as the First Amendment's right to assembly, the Third's restriction against quartering troops in your home without consent, the Fourth's guarantee of security in your home and effects and the prohibition against unreasonable search and seizure, along with the Ninth's nod to other rights that exist despite not being listed in so many words. If all of these other sorts of privacy exist, surely there must be a natural privacy between married couples in their bedroom, that should not be denied without due process. Thus, married couples gained the right to use contraceptives without government interference.
Amy Coney Barrett in 2018. Photo by Rachel Malehorn, courtesy of Wikimedia Commons. CC BY 3.0
Sources:
Griswold v. Connecticut
Amy Coney Barrett’s Confirmation Could Cause a ‘Right to Privacy’ Domino Effect
How Griswold v. Connecticut Led to Legal Contraception
Pressed On Landmark Contraception Case, Barrett Again Declines To Answer
Trump and Barrett's threat to abortion and LGBTQ rights is simply un-American
Be Afraid of Coney Barrett’s Views on Supreme Court Precedents
Amy Coney Barrett: spotlight falls on secretive Catholic group People of Praise
How birth control became part of the evangelical agenda
Contraception Is Not Abortion: The Strategic Campaign of Antiabortion Groups to Persuade the Public Otherwise
50 Years After the Griswold vs. Connecticut Decision [PDF]
What's So Controversial About the Contraceptives in Hobby Lobby
Could Women Not Do These 9 Things in 1971?
About Dawn Allen
Dawn Allen is a freelance writer and editor who is passionate about sustainability, political economy, gardening, traditional craftwork, and simple living. She and her husband are currently renovating a rural homestead in southeastern Michigan.