PRO-ROE: A pin evoking
the horror of illegal abortion
Jan. 22, 1973
Getting the Right to Choose
By Sarah Weddington
The
world was about to change for women that Monday morning, but only the
nine U.S. Supreme Court Justices and a few court personnel knew it. The
second case on the docket that day was Roe v. Wade, which
challenged the Texas laws making virtually all abortions illegal.
Justice Harry Blackmun read the decision he had written declaring the
laws unconstitutional, which had passed by a vote of 7 to 2.
I was in
Austin, Texas, a recently elected legislator, and unaware of what was
going on in Washington, even though I had filed and argued Roe v.
Wade. Roe began in 1969 when a group of University of Texas
graduate students asked whether they could be prosecuted as accomplices
to abortion if they shared information about where to get illegal
abortions or out-of-state legal ones. I was 24, a woman lawyer and
willing to do the case for free. We found a 1965 Supreme Court case
overturning a Connecticut law making it a crime to use birth control, as
well as cases in other states challenging antiabortion statutes. We
decided to challenge the Texas laws. A pregnant woman called Jane Roe
was the plaintiff in the class action we filed against Henry Wade, the
district attorney of Dallas County.
As Blackmun's words faded in D.C.
that Monday, phones began ringing in the law offices my husband Ron and
I shared. We learned we had won from reporters. But we didn't know
exactly what the court's decision said until a friend in Washington went
to the court, got a copy and read the entire document to me over the
phone. The opinion said women had a constitutional right to make private
decisions about whether to continue or terminate a pregnancy, and that
the state had not proven a compelling reason to regulate that. Abortion
was legal.
A woman scheduled to leave Austin on a 3 p.m. plane for a
California abortion was instead given one by her local doctor that
afternoon. After Roe, the ability of women to make choices
expanded. But the controversy did not end. Thirty years later, the
debate over abortion law has only intensified.
Sarah Weddington is
founder of the Weddington Center for promoting leadership skills
TIME Cover
Collection: Click
here to see covers from 1973