Description
Jennifer Kochman talks about her early life in Wisconsin, Vermont, and Illinois, becoming pregnant as a teenager, living as a single mother, and moving back to Vermont in 1969. She also speaks of the impact of the Unitarian Church on her life, and of meeting her second husband, Frank Kochman, who was playing in a blues band at the time. The bulk of the interview relates to the Kochman's involvement in the Vermont Freeman, an alternative newspaper founded in 1969 by Roger Albright. Jennifer speaks of how it was printed, funded, and distributed, as well as anecdotes about various stories that appeared in the paper. Jennifer Kochman concludes by speaking of her involvement with the Vermont Women's Health Center and women's health issues, including abortion.
Permission to publish material from the Vermont 1970s Counterculture Project must be obtained from the Vermont Historical Society.
Record Contributed By
Vermont Historical SocietyRecord Harvested From
Vermont Green Mountain Digital ArchiveKeywords
- Abortion
- Albright, Roger, 1922 1987
- American Newspapers
- Counterculture
- First Unitarian Church (Burlington, Vt.)
- Illinois
- Kochman, Frank, 1943
- Kochman, Jennifer, 1943
- Starksboro
- Teenage Pregnancy
- Unmarried Mothers
- Vermont
- Vermont Freeman (Starksboro, Vt.)
- Vermont Women's Health Center
- Women
- Women's Health Services