Harriet Pilpel Dies; Civil Libertarian, Reproductive Rights Pioneer
Harriet Pilpel, a pioneering lawyer on reproductive rights and other aspects of civil liberties law, died on this day.
Pilpel served as General Counsel for both Planned Parenthood and the ACLU. After graduating from Columbia University Law School, she joined the law firm of Morris Ernst, who also served Planned Parenthood and the ACLU, and handled early reproductive rights litigation.
In the 1950s, Pilpel and Ernst represented Dr. Alfred Kinsey against efforts to censor his pioneering research on sexual behavior.
Pilpel gave a very important paper at the 1964 ACLU Biennial Conference, which was nominally about the “war on crime” but discussed the existing laws making both abortion and homosexual activity crimes. She labeled all such laws “a dagger aimed at the heart of some of our most fundamental freedoms,” a very advanced position for 1964, but one that clearly had a major impact on ACLU policy and the direction of the law.
Learn more about Pilpel at the Jewish Women’s Archive here
See Pilpel (and two others) on the William Buckley TV show: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cffF9oAwEHQ
Learn more about Pilpel, sex and civil liberties: Leigh Ann Wheeler, How Sex Became a Civil Liberty (2013)
Read Leigh Ann Wheeler’s essay on how the ACLU took on the abortion issue
Read Pilpel’s early (1969) article on the right to abortion: http://www.theatlantic.com/past/docs/issues/95sep/abortion/pilp.htm