Margarethe Hardegger

Margarethe Hardegger
Hardegger in 1909
1st Women's Secretary of the Swiss Trade Union Federation
In office
1905–1909
PresidentKarl Zingg
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byMarie Hüni
Personal details
Born(1882-02-20)20 February 1882
Bern, Switzerland
Died23 September 1963(1963-09-23) (aged 81)
Minusio, Ticino, Switzerland
Political partySocial Democratic Party of Switzerland (until 1918)
Other political
affiliations
Socialist League (1908–1914)
Spouse
August Faas
(m. 1903; div. 1912)
Children2
EducationUniversity of Bern
OccupationUnion representative, journalist
Known forAbortion-rights activism

Margarethe Hardegger (20 February 1882 – 23 September 1963) was a Swiss socialist feminist and trade union activist. A leading figure in the women's labour movement in Switzerland, she became the first women's secretary of the Swiss Trade Union Federation (SGB) and provided assistance to hundreds of working women throughout the 1900s. She faced tensions with the SGB leadership over her radical politics, particularly due to her advocacy of access to birth control. By 1909, she had left the union and established the Socialist League together with Gustav Landauer, although she later broke away from the organisation due to Landauer's criticism of her feminist views. In 1915, she was arrested and put on trial for assisting in illegal abortions. The prosecution attempted to indict her over an alleged profit motive for the abortions, but she was able to convince the court that she was motivated by solidarity and received the minimum sentence for abortion assistance. She remained active in the Swiss anarchist movement, as well as women's rights and anti-war movements, until the end of her life.