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Arizona’s 1864 ********* law was made in a women’s rights desert—here’s what life was like then

Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain

Dora Juhl, a 15-year-old teenager, walked into Dr. Rosa Goodrich Boido’s obstetrical practice in Phoenix in January 1918. Juhl wanted to end her pregnancy.

But ********* was ******** in Arizona.

Boido, the city’s sole female physician,

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—about $2,000 today—to perform the *********.

Juhl said she could pay $27—her entire savings—but Boido explained the legal risks, including the prison time she could face, and insisted on full payment. Juhl left the office, then tried to give herself an ********* and returned to Boido’s practice in physical distress.

Boido then admitted Juhl as a patient. It is unclear whether Boido performed an *********, removed fetal tissue, or merely gave her pain medication. The next day, police arrived and arrested Boido. Arizona charged Boido under a 54-year-old law banning abortions. She lost her medical license and spent three months in jail with bail set at $15,000—about $300,000 today—before her trial.

Those days may soon return to Arizona.

The Arizona Supreme Court

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that this same 160-year-old territorial law that bans *********—unless the pregnant person’s life is in danger—will go
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.

Since that ruling, the Arizona Legislature has been grappling with how to handle the near-total ban. After several weeks of attempts, the

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a repeal of the law on April 24, 2024, that now goes to the state Senate for debate and a vote. But even if the ban is
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, it could still take temporary effect this summer.

Passed during the Civil War in 1864,

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that anyone who used medicine or surgery “to procure the miscarriage of any woman then being with child, and shall be thereof duly convicted, shall be punished by imprisonment in the Territorial prison for a term not less than two years nor more than five years.”

The sole exception was a physician who “deems it necessary to produce the miscarriage of any woman in order to save her life.”

In the late 1800s, women in Arizona, as in other places in the U.S., had no direct say in laws governing their bodies.

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in Arizona and researches slavery, I think it is useful to understand what life was like in Arizona when this ********* ban was in force.

A women’s rights desert

In 1864, Arizona—which was an official territory of the ******* States—was a vast desert.

In the 1870s, Arizona had less than 10,000 residents, excluding Native Americans, whom the

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and the U.S. refused to grant citizenship.

Most women living in territorial Arizona were Diné, meaning Navajo, or Chiricahua Apache. In 1864, the U.S. Army was fighting Indigenous people in an effort to take Native lands. U.S. forces crowded Apaches

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in Arizona and New Mexico.

All women in Arizona could not vote, serve on juries or exercise full control over property in a marriage. Demographically, the territory had a pronounced gender imbalance in favor of men—women were just one-quarter of

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.

Most of the white men in Arizona moved there to work as miners and soldiers. People there also worked on cattle ranches and grew cotton. Mining and ranching interests controlled politics, and many Arizonans supported the Southern Confederacy, though Arizona was a free territory in 1863, meaning

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.

Many politicians in Arizona, like House Speaker William Claude Jones, were transplants from the South.

Jones was responsible for shepherding the ********* ban through the Legislature. Around this time, Jones abandoned his first wife. Throughout his life, he would have three more wives, including a 12-year-old, a 15-year-old and a

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at the time of their weddings.

Women’s rights in territorial Arizona

Women had few basic rights in Arizona before it became a state in 1912. And territorial law did not favor women.

Hispanic and ******** ********* women had even fewer rights than white women. Arizona punished anyone who kidnapped a ****** person for the purpose of selling them into slavery. But, at the same time,

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of white persons with ******** or mulattoes.”

Until 1871, a wife who divorced a husband for adultery faced the prospect of a court-appointed trustee to oversee the property or alimony she received.

But if a wife was found to have committed adultery, she lost all her property to her husband, forever. The

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granted women more autonomy, but marriage remained an unequal partnership.

By around 1870, women’s suffragists began advocating for Arizona to follow Wyoming, Colorado and Utah in

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. This was 50 years before the 19th Amendment gave the right to vote to all women in the U.S.

Led by female attorney Murat Masterson, suffragists introduced a bill to

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. It *******. White women were allowed to cast ballots in county school board elections, but it took determined activism by women’s rights activists to achieve even this vote.

Suffragists led by Pauline O’Neill, Frances Willard Munds and others continued to push for the right for women to vote through organized clubs and staged rallies—and worked to sway ****** opinion.

Women’s health doctor Boido was also active in the women’s suffrage ****** in Arizona by promoting **** education, as well as anti-****** penalty, anti-alcohol and anti-tobacco efforts.

In 1913, one year after Arizona became a state,

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.

Getting an ********* in territorial Arizona

Some women like Juhl did indeed violate

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, based on historical evidence of physicians charging a high fee.

After Boido’s arrest and arraignment, she remained in jail for three months, including during her trial. The jury “

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of performing an ******** operation,” according to the Arizona *********** newspaper.

Historian Mary S. Melcher has argued that Boido did not have a jury of her peers since

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.

Juhl returned to her family in Yavapai County and went back to high school.

After her conviction in 1918,

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at the women’s wing of the state penitentiary. She served two months, then was paroled because the women’s section of the prison was too hot and unlivable in the Arizona summer. With Boido’s medical license gone, she moved to California. She ***** in Hawaii in 1959 at age 89.

Arizona kept this 1864 ********* ban in place until the U.S. Supreme Court ruled, in

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in 1973, that the right to get an ********* was constitutionally guaranteed. The court reversed Roe v. Wade in 2022, sparking a series of events that have led to the resurrection of the 1864 Arizona ********* ban.

Provided by
The Conversation


This article is republished from

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under a Creative Commons license. Read the
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.

Citation:
Arizona’s 1864 ********* law was made in a women’s rights desert—here’s what life was like then (2024, April 25)
retrieved 25 April 2024
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#Arizonas #********* #law #womens #rights #desertheres #life

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