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He was deemed unfit for procreation: his father gave him to the strongest enslaved woman in 1859. Labeled defective throughout his youth, by age 19, after three doctors had examined his frail body and reached identical conclusions, Thomas Bowmont Callahan began to believe that word belonged to him. He was 19 in 1859, but his body had never aligned with his age. He was born in January 1840, two months premature, during one of the coldest winters Mississippi had seen in decades. His mother, Sarah Bowmont Callahan, went into unexpected labor while his father, Judge William Callahan, entertained visiting judges and planters at their home. The midwife, an enslaved woman known as Mama Ruth who had delivered many of the county's white children, examined the baby and shook her head. She told Judge Callahan the infant would not survive the night. He was too small, his breathing too shallow. The judge had to prepare his wife for the loss. Sarah refused. Feverish and exhausted, she held the baby to her chest and insisted he would live. She could feel his heart beating, weak but determined. The child survived that night, and the next, and the next. However, surviving was not the same as being healthy. At one month old, he weighed barely three kilos. By six months, he could no longer hold his head up. By his first birthday, while other children were standing or taking their first steps, he struggled to sit upright. Doctors summoned from Natchez, Vicksburg, and New Orleans agreed that his premature birth had permanently delayed his development. In 1846, when Thomas was six, yellow fever struck the Mississippi. Sarah Callahan fell ill and never recovered. Thomas remembered her last day: her yellowish skin, her distant gaze. She called him to her side and told him he would face challenges all his life. People would underestimate him, mock him, reject him. He had to remember that he was master of his own mind, heart, and soul. No one should make him feel less than whole. She died the next morning. Judge William Callahan was physically imposing, something his son could not be. Standing six feet two inches tall, with broad shoulders, a commanding voice, and a commanding presence, he had risen from humble beginnings as a lawyer in Alabama. Through his marriage to the Bowmont family and the acquisition of land, he expanded a 7,000-acre cotton plantation along the high bluffs of the Mississippi, 15 miles south of Natchez. The main house, built in 1835, was a Greek Revival mansion of white-painted brick, crowned with Doric columns and sweeping verandas. Crystal chandeliers hung from 15 feet high ceilings. Imported furniture filled rooms that could accommodate 100 guests. Persian rugs lay on polished pine heartwood floors. Beyond the manor house lay the machinery of production: cotton gin, forge, carpentry shop, smokehouse, laundry, kitchen building, overseer's house, and, farther still, the quarters: 20 small huts where 300 slaves lived. Their rough-planked walls, earthen floors, and individual fireplaces contrasted sharply with the refinement of the manor house. Thomas was educated at home. Too frail for boarding school, he received instruction in Greek, Latin, mathematics, literature, history, and philosophy in his father's library. At 19, he stood 5 feet 6 inches tall and weighed about 120 pounds. His chest was slightly sunken due to pectus excavatum. His hands trembled constantly. His eyesight required thick glasses. His voice never deepened. His hair was thinning. His skin was pale and translucent. Most significantly, his body had not yet reached sexual maturity. He had little facial and body hair. Medical examinations confirmed that his reproductive organs were severely underdeveloped. Shortly after his 18th birthday, in January 1858, Judge Callahan arranged a meeting between Thomas and Martha Henderson, the daughter of a Port Gibson planter. The meeting lasted 15 minutes before she left, privately expressing her disgust and disbelief at the prospect of marrying someone she described as childish. In February 1858, Dr. Samuel Harrison of Natchez examined Thomas in the judge's chambers. He measured his body, made observations, and inspected his genitals, describing them as prepubescent in appearance and texture. He diagnosed hypogonadism, probably due to premature birth. In his professional opinion, the likelihood of having offspring was virtually nil. Spermatogenesis was insufficient. Hormone production was deficient. Tuberculosis might be difficult. Conception would be impossible. Judge Callahan sought further opinions. Dr. Jeremiah Blackwood, of Vicksburg,Dr. Antoine Merier of New Orleans performed similar tests. Both confirmed severe hypogonadism and permanent infertility. Read more in the first comment. 👇👇

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