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They called me defective during toteminovida and by age 19, after three doctors examined my frail body and pronounced their verdict, I started to believe them.Medical Facilities & Services
My mother, Sarah Bowmont Callahan, went into labor unexpectedly during a dinner party my father was hosting for visiting judges and planters. The midwife who attended her, a enslaved woman named Mama Ruth, who delivered half the white babies in the county, took one look at me and shook her head.
“Judge Callahan,” she told my father, “this baby won’t make it through the night. He’s too small, too. His breathing is shallow. Best prepare your wife for the loss.”
She was right. I survived that first night and the next and the next. But surviving isn’t the same as thriving. At one month, I weighed barely six pounds. At 6 months, I still couldn’t hold up my own head. At one year, when other babies were standing and some were taking their first steps, I could barely sit upright.
The doctors my father brought in from Nachez, from Vixsburg, from as far away as New Orleans, all said the same thing: Premature birth had stunted my development in ways that would affect me for life.
“Thomas,” she whispered, her voice barely audible. “You’re going to face challenges your whole life. People will underestimate you. They’ll pity you. They’ll dismiss you. But you have something more valuable than physical strength. You have your mind, your heart, your soul. Don’t let anyone make you feel less than whole.”
My father, Judge William Callahan, was a formidable man in every way I wasn’t. 6 feet tall, broadshouldered, with a voice that could silence a courtroom with a single word. He’d built his fortune from nothing. Started as a poor lawyer from Alabama, married into the Bowmont family’s modest plantation, and through shrewd investments and strategic land acquisitions, transformed those initial 800 acres into an 8,000 acre cotton empire.Mathematics
Inside, crystal chandeliers hung from 15 ft ceilings, imported furniture filled rooms large enough to host balls for a 100 guests, and Persian rugs covered floors of polished heart pine. Behind the main house stretched the working plantation: the cotton gin, the blacksmith shop, the carpentry workshop, the smokehouse, the laundry, the kitchen building, the overseer’s house, and beyond all that, the quarters.
Rows of small cabins where 300 enslaved people lived in conditions that contrasted sharply with the mansion’s luxury. I grew up in this world of extreme wealth built on extreme brutality, though as a child I didn’t understand the full implications.Medical Facilities & Services
By age 19, I stood 5 ft 2 in tall, the height of a boy entering puberty rather than a young man. My frame was slight, weighing perhaps 110 lb, with bones so delicate that Dr. Harrison once commented I had the skeleton of a bird. My chest caved inward slightly, a condition the doctors called pectus excavatum, the result of ribs that had never properly formed. My hands trembled constantly, a fine tremor that made simple tasks like writing or holding a teacup and exercising concentration.
My eyesight was terrible, requiring thick spectacles that magnified my pale blue eyes to an almost comical size. Without them, the world was a blur. My voice had never fully deepened, remaining in that awkward range between boy and man. My hair was fine and light brown, thinning already despite my youth. My skin was pale, almost translucent, showing every vein beneath the surface.
The examinations began shortly after my 18th birthday in January 1858. My father had arranged for me to meet a potential bride, Martha Henderson, daughter of a wealthy planter from Port Gibson.
After that humiliation, my father summoned Dr. Harrison. Dr. Samuel Harrison was Nachez’s most prominent physician, a Yale educated man in his 50s who specialized in what he called matters of masculine health and heredity. He arrived at Callahan Plantation on a humid February morning, carrying a leather medical bag and an air of clinical detachment.Medical Facilities & Services
My father left us alone in his study. Dr. Harrison had me undress completely, then conducted the most humiliating hour of my life. He measured me—height, weight, chest circumference, limb length. He examined every inch of my body, making notes in a small leather journal. He paid particular attention to my groin, manipulating my underdeveloped testicles, commenting aloud about their size and consistency.
“Significantly below normal,” he muttered, writing. “Prepubertal in appearance and texture. H.”
When he finished, he had me dress and called my father back into the room.
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