Margaret Pyke was a family planning pioneer who worked in the family planning movement for 36 years, until her death in 1966. When five birth control societies merged to form the
National Birth Control Council (NBCC) in 1930, Margaret Pyke was its first administrator. The NBCC changed its name to the National Birth Control Association in 1931 and then to the Family Planning Association in 1939. Since 1998 it has been known as FPA. In 1930 the purpose of the NBCC was "that married people may space or limit their families and thus mitigate the evils of ill health and poverty". Margaret Pyke was “tireless in creating and sustaining” the new NBCC clinics which were established across the UK to provide advice on contraception, marriage and all aspects of sex. The branches “were staffed entirely by volunteers (except for the doctors) and worked in borrowed premises”. In 1933 she contracted pulmonary tuberculosis and subsequently lived with Lady Denman at Balcombe, taking over from her, when she died in 1954, as chair of the Family Planning Association. In 1955 Pyke coordinated the visit of the minister of health,
Iain Macleod, to the Family Planning Association’s offices and one of its clinics, an event which is acknowledge helping to change the public perception towards contraception, making it more be seen as “respectable”. Margaret Pyke was also involved in the foundation of the
International Planned Parenthood Federation, was appointed OBE in 1963 for her work in the family planning sector, and after her death in 1966, the Margaret Pyke Trust was founded in her memory. In July 1977 Pyke's son, David, was interviewed about his mother by the historian,
Brian Harrison, as part of the Suffrage Interviews project, titled
Oral evidence on the suffragette and suffragist movements: the Brian Harrison interviews. He talks about his mother's family background, education and her involvement in the birth control movement. ==Death==