PORTLAND, Ore. — Leana McClellan never got a chance to meet her grandmother. But she knows the story of her grandmother's abortion. It was 1925, and Elizabeth Apotheker Kannerstein had just married.
A couple days after her abortion, Elizabeth Apotheker Kannerstein died of complications. She left behind three kids from her first marriage. Her granddaughter says Elizabeth's kids' lives were shattered. "People would come in before the show for dinner and then after the shows ended, they would come back in for a drink," explains Marisa McClellan, Elizabeth's great-granddaughter
"All three of those children from that family just hurt their own children because of this event," Liana McClellan said.A few decades before Elizabeth died, there were abortion tools and medications sold in catalogues."Female hospitals" quietly offered surgical abortions. But by the 1900s, many of these options were gone.targeting obscenity outlawed the mailing of contraception and abortifacients — or even information about them.
Nobody knows how many people died from illegal abortions. These traumas were often kept secret. Leana McClellan says that was the case for their family.
This is reminiscent of prohibition. Did it it STOP drinking, nope. Now it moves into the dark corridors where it should never go.
My great grandfather was killed in a accident in a coal mine. It hasn’t had any influence on my views on the use of fossil fuels.
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