Woman Born in 1853 Talks About the Baby She Never Got to Name
Автор: The 19th Century Voices
Загружено: 2026-03-13
Просмотров: 400
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Woman Born in 1853 Talks About the Baby She Never Got to Name
Ada Carey (née Whitfield) (1853–1931) was born in rural Kentucky, the middle child of a small corn farmer. She grew up in a tight farming community on the county road — a two-room house with a sleeping loft, a Baptist congregation that knew every family's business, a world where women's losses were absorbed quietly into ordinary life and rarely spoken of directly. In 1876, when she was twenty-three, she lost a child before it could be named — stillborn, or gone in the first days — and the world moved on within the week. Her husband said little. The congregation offered brief condolence and expected her to recover. She did recover, outwardly, and she has spent fifty years grieving a person no one else has treated as a person. In this account, given in her seventy-seventh year, she does not dispute the loss. She disputes the silence around it — the way the world decided it had not quite happened, and the way she was made to learn, without being told, that nothing was what she was supposed to feel. She married Thomas Carey in 1872, raised four living children, and built a life alongside an absence no one in the house ever named. A small square of pale blue cloth — cut from the fabric she had set aside for the child's first gown, never sewn — sits at the bottom of her sewing box and has not been moved since November of 1876.
#1800s #19thcentury #historicalnarratives
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