Reproductive rights and justice

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  • SCA has a selection of print and archival material that document the history of birth control in Canada, the United Kingdom, and the United States, women’s reproductive health, and family planning. Collections include the organizational papers of the Parents' Information Bureau, a Kitchener-based clinic for family planning and birth control set up by A.R. Kaufman of the Kaufman Rubber Company, and records related to Marie Stopes, the founder of Mother's Clinic for Constructive Birth Control, the world’s first birth control clinic.

    In addition to documenting the early advancement of reproductive rights, SCA's collections support research about eugenics-informed rhetoric used to advance reproductive issues and advocacy in and outside of feminist circles. SCA also holds records and trial transcripts related to the trial of Dorothea Palmer, who was arrested in 1936 for advertising birth control to women in the Eastview neighbourhood of Ottawa.

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            BC18 · Book Collection

            Collection consists of published holdings held by Special Collections & Archives related to Indigenous peoples in Canada and abroad with a primary focus on First Nations, Inuit, Métis communities. The collection consist of of books, periodicals, zines, and other published materials, produced by, about, and in the language(s) of various Indigenous peoples and communities.

            Titles in this collection are varied in topic and will be of interest to those interested in grassroots activism, self-determination governance, land rights and stewardship, community building, and settler and religious colonialism.

            SCA402-GA468 · Collection · 1941

            Materials related to Reverend Alfred Henry Tyrer’s books and publications on birth control, sex education, and marriage life.

            Includes pamphlets and order forms for Tyrer’s books Where did we come from, mother dear? (Marriage Welfare Bureau, 1939) and Sex, marriage and birth control (Marriage Welfare Bureau, 1936), and ephemera related to the books and the Marriage Welfare Bureau.

            Also contains booklet Marriage welfare : some facts about birth-control by Reverend Alfred Henry Tyrer which acted as promotional material for the book Sex, marriage and birth control. Booklet includes sections: Birth-control, the population problem, definition of birth-control, birth control and war, mothers who die in child-birth, infant mortality, birth control vs. infanticide, birth-control vs. abortions, birth-control vs. degeneracy and disease, birth-control vs. prostitution, economics and birth-control, divorce, religion and birth-control, the present status of birth-control, a prairie marriage.

            Materials were enclosed in an envelope sent from Ontario on July 10, 1941, and with a letter addressed to Steve E. Chorney from Ranfurly (Alberta) acting as an introduction to the publications and explaining their importance.

            Tyrer, Alfred Henry