Norma Leah Nelson McCorvey (September 22, 1947 – February 18, 2017), also known by the pseudonym "Jane Roe", was the plaintiff in the landmark American legal case Roe v. Wade in which the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 1973 that individual state laws banning abortion were unconstitutional.
Later in her life, McCorvey became an Evangelical Protestant
and in her remaining years, a Roman Catholic, and took part in the
anti-abortion movement. McCorvey stated then that her involvement in Roe was "the biggest mistake of [her]
life". However, in the Nick Sweeney documentary AKA Jane Roe, McCorvey
said, in what she called her "deathbed
confession", that "she
never really supported the anti-abortion movement" and that she had
been paid for her anti-abortion sentiments.
Early life
McCorvey was born Norma Leah Nelson in Simmesport,
Louisiana, and spent her early childhood at her family's residence in Lettsworth
in Pointe Coupee Parish. Later in her childhood, the family moved to Houston.
McCorvey's father, Olin Nelson, a TV repairman, left the family when McCorvey
was 13 years old, and her parents subsequently divorced. She and her older
brother were raised by their mother, Mary (née Gautreaux), a violent alcoholic.
McCorvey's father died on December 28, 1995. McCorvey's mother was raised a
Pentecostal but McCorvey's father led her and the family as Jehovah's Witnesses.
McCorvey had trouble with the law that began at the age of
ten, when she robbed the cash register at a gas station and ran away to Oklahoma
City with a friend. They tricked a hotel worker into letting them rent a room,
and were there for two days when a maid walked in on her and her female friend
kissing. McCorvey was arrested and taken to court, where she was declared a
ward of the state and a judge sent her to a Catholic boarding school, though
she did not become Catholic until 1998.
Later, McCorvey was sent to the State School for Girls in
Gainesville, Texas, on and off from ages 11 to 15. She said this was the
happiest time of her childhood, and every time she was sent home, would
purposely do something bad to be sent back. After being released, McCorvey
lived with her mother's cousin, who allegedly raped her every night for three
weeks. When McCorvey's mother found out, her cousin said McCorvey was lying.
While working at a restaurant, Norma met Woody McCorvey
(born 1940), and she married him at the age of 16 in 1963. She later left him
after he allegedly assaulted her. She moved in with her mother and gave birth
to her first child, Melissa, in 1965. After Melissa's birth, McCorvey developed
a severe drinking and drug problem. Soon after, she began identifying as a
lesbian. In her book, she stated that she went on a weekend trip to visit two
friends and left her baby with her mother. When she returned, her mother
replaced Melissa with a baby doll and reported Norma to the police as having
abandoned her baby, and called the police to take her out of the house. She
would not tell her where Melissa was for weeks, and finally let her visit her
child after three months. She allowed McCorvey to move back in. One day, she
woke McCorvey up after a long day of work; she told McCorvey to sign what were
presented as insurance papers, and she did so without reading them. However,
the papers she had signed were adoption papers, giving her mother custody of
Melissa, and McCorvey was then kicked out of the house. Her mother disputed
that version of the events, and said that McCorvey had agreed to the adoption.
The following year, McCorvey again became pregnant and gave
birth to a baby, Jennifer, who was placed for adoption.
Roe v. Wade
In 1969, at the age of 21, McCorvey became pregnant a third
time and returned to Dallas. According to McCorvey, friends advised her that
she should assert falsely that she had been raped by a group of black men and
that she could thereby obtain a legal abortion under Texas's law, which
prohibited most abortion; sources differ over whether Texas law had such a rape
exception. Due to a lack of police evidence or documentation, the scheme was
not successful, and McCorvey later said it was a fabrication. She attempted to
obtain an illegal abortion, but the recommended clinic had been closed down by
authorities. Her doctor, Richard Lane, suggested that she consult Henry
McCluskey, an adoption lawyer in Dallas. McCorvey stated that she was only
interested in an abortion, but agreed to meet with McCluskey.
Eventually, McCorvey was referred to attorneys Linda Coffee
and Sarah Weddington, who were looking for pregnant women who were seeking abortions.
The case, Roe v. Wade (Henry Wade was
the district attorney), took three years of trials to reach the Supreme Court
of the United States, and McCorvey never attended a single trial. During the
course of the lawsuit, McCorvey gave birth and placed the baby for adoption.
McCorvey told the press that she was "Jane
Roe" soon after the decision was reached, stating that she had sought
an abortion because she was unemployable and greatly depressed. In 1983,
McCorvey told the press that she had been raped; in 1987, she said the rape
claim was untrue.
McCorvey's third
child
In 2021, Shelley Lynn Thornton, McCorvey's third child,
stated she was "neither pro-life nor
pro-choice". She grew up not knowing that she was the fetus at the
center of the Roe case until her birth mother appeared on the Today show in
1989 and spoke of her desire to meet her daughter. In response, a journalist
for the National Enquirer found Thornton as a teenager and told her about her
prenatal history, which greatly upset her. In 1991, Thornton became pregnant
and did not have an abortion because abortion was "not part of who I was". By 2021, she had met her two
half-siblings, but not her birth mother. On the phone in 1994, according to
Thornton, McCorvey told her that she should have thanked her for not having an
abortion. Thornton's visceral reaction was "What!
I'm supposed to thank you for getting knocked up ... and then giving me
away?" She told her birth mother that she "would never, ever thank her for not aborting me". She
reflected that "When someone's
pregnant with a baby, and they don't want that baby, that person develops knowing
they're not wanted."
Anti-abortion
activism
In 1994, McCorvey published her autobiography, I Am Roe. At
a book signing, McCorvey was befriended by Flip Benham, an evangelical minister
and the national director of the anti-abortion organization Operation Rescue.
She converted to Evangelical Protestantism and was baptized on August 8, 1995,
by Benham, in a Dallas, Texas, backyard swimming pool—an event that was filmed
for national television. Two days later, she announced that she had quit her
job at an abortion clinic and had become an advocate of Operation Rescue's
campaign to make abortion illegal. She voiced remorse for her part in the
Supreme Court decision and said she had been a pawn for abortion activists.
On August 17, 1998, McCorvey was received into the Catholic
Church in a Mass celebrated by Father Edward Robinson and concelebrated by
Father Frank Pavone, director of Priests for Life, at Saint Thomas Aquinas Church
in Dallas. McCorvey's second book, Won by Love, described her religious
conversion and was published in 1998. In the book, she said that her change of
heart occurred in 1995, when she saw a fetal development poster in an Operation
Rescue office.
In 2004, McCorvey sought to have the U.S. Supreme Court
overturn Roe v. Wade, saying that
there was no evidence that the procedure harms women, but the case was ultimately
dismissed in 2005. On January 22, 2008, McCorvey endorsed Republican
presidential candidate Ron Paul because of his anti-abortion position.
McCorvey remained active in anti-abortion demonstrations,
including one she participated in before President Barack Obama's commencement
address to the graduates of the University of Notre Dame. McCorvey was arrested
on the first day of U.S. Senate hearings for the confirmation to the Supreme
Court of the United States of Sonia Sotomayor after McCorvey and another
protester began shouting during Senator Al Franken's opening statement.
McCorvey appeared in the 2013 film Doonby, in which she delivers an
anti-abortion message. She is also the subject of Joshua Prager's 2021 book,
The Family Roe: An American Story.
Relationship with
Connie Gonzalez
Soon after giving birth a third time, as Roe v. Wade made its way through the courts;
McCorvey met and began a long-term relationship with Connie Gonzalez. They
lived together in Dallas for 35 years.
After converting to Catholicism, McCorvey continued to live
with Gonzalez, though she described their relationship as platonic. Later in
life, McCorvey stated that she was no longer a lesbian, although she later said
that her religious conversion to Evangelical Christianity and renouncement of
her sexuality were financially motivated. McCorvey moved out of the house she
shared with Gonzalez in 2006, shortly after Gonzalez suffered a stroke.
Death
Norma McCorvey died of heart failure in Katy, Texas, on
February 18, 2017, at the age of 69.
AKA Jane Roe
documentary
On May 22, 2020, a documentary titled AKA Jane Roe aired on
FX, describing McCorvey's life and the financial incentives to change her views
on abortion. In an interview conducted for the film shortly before her death,
in what she referred to as her "deathbed
confession", McCorvey said her anti-abortion activism had been "all an act", which she did
because she was paid, stating that she did not care whether a woman got an
abortion. "I was the big fish. I
think it was a mutual thing. I took their money and they'd put me out in front
of the cameras and tell me what to say. That's what I'd say," McCorvey
said. "If a young woman wants to
have an abortion, that's no skin off my ass. That's why they call it
choice", she added.
Robert Schenck, a formerly anti-abortion evangelical pastor
who worked with McCorvey, verified the claim made in the documentary of
McCorvey receiving financial compensation. He acknowledged that his group paid
McCorvey to speak against abortion, stating: "Her name and photo would command some of the largest windfalls of
dollars for my group and many others, but the money we gave her was modest.
More than once, I tried to make up for it with an added check, but it was never
fair." According to tax documents, McCorvey received at least $450,000
from anti-abortion groups during her years as an activist. Schenck said that he
was surprised that McCorvey said she favored abortion rights, although he said
that he knew she "harbored doubts
about the pro-life message she was telegraphing".
Pavone, who had a decades long association with McCorvey,
said that she was not on the payroll of his organization, Priests for Life, and
said that he did not believe that McCorvey's activism was disingenuous saying, "I can even see her being emotionally
cornered to get those words out of her mouth, but the things that I saw in 22
years with her—the thousands and thousands of conversations that we had—that
was real." He later wrote, "So
abortion supporters are claiming Norma McCorvey, the Jane Roe of Roe v. Wade,
wasn't sincere in her conversion. She was. I was her spiritual guide for 22
years, received her into the Catholic Church, kept regular contact, spoke with
her the day she died, and conducted her funeral." Abby Johnson, who
worked for Planned Parenthood before joining the anti-abortion movement, said
that McCorvey called her on the phone days before her death to express remorse
for abortion. Johnson said that she believed McCorvey was a damaged woman who
should not have been thrust into the spotlight so quickly after turning against
abortion saying, "I don't have any
problem believing that in the last year of her life that she tried to convince
herself abortion was OK. But I know at the end of her life, she did not believe
that."
Books
McCorvey, Norma & Meisler, Andy (1994). I Am Roe. New
York: Harper Collins. ISBN 0060170107.
McCorvey, Norma & Thomas, Gary (1997). Won by Love.
Nashville: Thomas Nelson Publishers. ISBN 0785272372.
Prager, Joshua (2021). The Family Roe: An American Story. W.
W. Norton & Company. ISBN 978-0393247725.
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