Shelley Lynn Thornton
Quick Facts
Biography
Shelley Lynn Thornton (born June 2, 1970) is the biological daughter of Norma McCorvey. Also referred to by the pseudonym "Roe Baby", Thornton is the child at the center of the 1973 U.S. Supreme Court decision, Roe v. Wade. Her identity was not publicly known until 2021.
Life
Shelley Lynn Thornton was born to Norma McCorvey on June 2, 1970 at the Dallas Osteopathic Hospital. At three days old, she was adopted by then-engaged Texas residents Ruth Schmidt and Billy Thornton.Shelley Lynn Thornton was two-and-a-half years old when the Roe v. Wade ruling was issued. She graduated from Highline High School in 1988 and entered secretarial school. Her birth mother first made contact with her in 1989 when she was a teenager living near Seattle.
Thornton married her boyfriend Doug of Albuquerque, New Mexico in March 1991; their son was born later that year, followed by two daughters in 1999 and 2000. The family moved to Tucson, Arizona for Doug's job. Thornton met her biological half-sisters, McCorvey's other two daughters, in March 2013; but although Thornton and McCorvey had several telephone conversations, they never actually met in person.
In 2021, Thornton's identity as the "Roe baby" was released in Joshua Prager's book, The Family Roe: An American Story.
Discovery of Roe v. Wade connection
Thornton was McCorvey's third child. Although McCorvey had sought an abortion, she was prohibited from doing so by the laws in Texas at that time.McCorvey eventually brought, and won, a lawsuit, securing the right to an abortion. Despite McCorvey's desire to abort the fetus, Thornton was not aborted as a fetus, because McCorvey gave birth before Roe v. Wade was ruled.
Many years later, after Thornton learned of her identity as the "Roe baby", she engaged in telephone conversations with McCorvey, who told her that she was placed for adoption because, Shelley recalled, "I knew I couldn't take care of you." When Thornton asked McCorvey about her biological father, McCorvey told Thornton that his first name was Bill and described what he looked like.Thornton also learned about her two older half-sisters from McCorvey, Melissa and Jennifer.
In a 2021 interview, Thornton stated that she was not pro-choice or pro-life. She grew up not knowing that she was the fetus in the Roe case until her birth mother appeared on the Today show in 1989 and talked about 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 made her sad. 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. She nearly met her birth mother in 1994; according to Thornton, McCorvey told her on the phone that she should have thanked her for not having an abortion. Thornton's 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, "When someone's pregnant with a baby, and they don't want that baby, that person develops knowing they're not wanted."
Reversal of Roe
In 2022, the U.S. Supreme Court decided another abortion case, Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization. In Dobbs, the Court explicitly overruled Roe. Thornton released a statement speaking out against the Supreme Court's decision to overturn the 1973 landmark Roe case. In a statement to ABC News, Thornton indicated that she worries the Dobbs ruling could be an omen for future unrest. She told ABC News through her spokesperson, "Too many times has a woman's choice, voice, and individual freedom been decided for her by others. Being that I am bound to the center of Roe v. Wade, I have a unique perspective on this matter specifically." She added, "I believe that the decision to have an abortion is a private, medical choice that should be between a woman, her family, and her doctor. We have lived in times of uncertainty and insecurity before, but to have such a fundamental right taken away and this ruling be overturned concerns me of what lies ahead."