The American Journal of the Medical Sciences (1847)

From LGBTQIA+ Archives Wiki
Revision as of 05:37, 5 December 2022 by Archiveadmin (talk | contribs)

The American Journal of the Medical Sciences (1847) includes passages about intersex conditions.

References

Passages

Art. VII.--Case of Doubtful Sex

By S.H. Harris, M. D., of Clarkesvill, Va.

The existence of hermaphrodites, or those creatures which were at one time supposed to unit in the same individual the distinctive organs of the two sexes, is now, I believe, wholly denied by physiologists. Creatures of our race, however, have frequently been noticed, presenting such equivocal appearances in their sexual apparatus as to render it exceedingly doubtful as to their sexuality. A monster of this singular character is now living in Mecklinburg county, Virginia, and is probably as remarkable a case of the kind as any recorded in the annals of physiology.

In describing the creature I shall use the masculine pronoun man, more for the sake of convenience, than from any conviction of its grammatical propriety.

Ned, a slave and house servant, wearing man's apparel, is about eighteen years of age and probably five feet eight or nine inches high; and though not corpulent, is rather robust than otherwise. His head is large, with a coarse masculine face, wide mouth, thick lips, feminine voice, and a chin entirely destitute of beard. His skin is soft and delicate, with upper and lower extremities well formed and founded, with the exception of his feet which resemble very much the males of the African race. Thus far, however, his general appearance presents nothing very remarkable, or anything calculated to excite doubts as to his sexuality. His shining ebony skin and rounded limb, are not uncommon with negro boys, trained up as house servants among the luxurious livers of the South. But on opening his vest and shirt bosom, there are presented two large and well developed mammae, having all the external characteristics of the breast of a health well-formed young woman. His neck, shoulders, and chest partake likewise of this feminine character, having the soft and voluptuous outline of the female. On examining the external genital organs, which, by the way, are exhibited with marked reluctance, a strange and anomalous appearance is presented. The pubis is large, prominent, and covered with hair as in the female, and but for the conspicuous projection of a dwarfish-looking penis, about an inch long in the usual situation of that organ, the creature would at once be pronounced a woman. This penis is naturally formed in every respect, and eminently endowed, as he informed me, with virile sensibility. Immediately below it is a cleft or fissure running back as in the female organ, to the perineum, the sides of which are formed of thick folds of skin, resembling somewhat the scrotum, and shaded with long hair, representing tolerably well the external labia of the female. No testicles can be found. On separating the thighs the fissure is found to be from an inch to an inch and a half deep, smooth at the bottom and exactly in the situation of the vagina. The cavernous portions of the penis may be distinctly felt through the walls of the cavity near the bottom. The membrane lining it appears, in fact, to be only a continuation of the outward skin, but is more soft and delicate; without, however, any of the characteristics of the vaginal mucous membrane. Pressing the finger on the bottom it yields so readily, as to induce the belief that there is a cavity within, the outlet to which is merely closed up by the skin or membrane stretched across the bottom of the fissure. But the anomaly does not stop here. This singular creature has been regularly menstruating for three or four years through the penis, attended in its inception and progress, by all the symptoms which commonly characterize the catamenia in young females. So well marked are the returns of this monthly discharge by the usual disturbance of the system, that the elder members of the family are never at a loss to determine when he is under its influence. As in most females in every station of life, there is likewise at such periods a shrinking from observation, and the constant exercise of a sleepless vigilance in preventing exposure. The amount or character of the discharge has never been clearly ascertained, but from his own imperfect account of it, and the evidences furnished by his linen, it differs not very materially either in quantity or quality from that of a young woman.

The question here naturally presents itself, to which of the sexes does this human belong? In view of all the facts stated, the conclusion I think, is forced upon us, that the female organs predominate, or, in other words, that while the creature has only one of the organs of the male, and that an imperfect one, he has within the pelvis the interior genital apparatus of the female. That there is a uterus with its appendages I feel no doubt; or whence this regular catamenial discharge, and all those attributes, both moral and physical, which mark the presence of such an organ?--But it has been remarked that he displays in his general deportment, a decided partiality for the society of young females, and it has even been noticed that he exhibits towards them at times strong salacious propensities. This, I think, can be easily accounted for on the supposition, that he has been, from childhood up, taught to look upon himself as a male, and now in imitation of others, deports himself as such to the other sex. Whether his amorous advances to the dusky maidens around him, has ever resulted in any practical display of virility, is unknown. In the absence of all information on the subject, it is fair to conclude, that no seminal discharge has, or ever will take place. Such a phenomenon as a regular menstrual discharge, and the immersion of semen masculinum, from the same set of organs, would place the creature in a new order of beings, with sexual endowments and faculties, but a little less remarkable than those ascribed to the fabled hermaphrodites. But whence comes this peculiar fluid? If furnished by a womb, how does it make its way into the urethra? These are questions certainly of very little importance in a practical point of view; but related as they do to the interesting science of physiology, are deemed not wholly unworthy of consideration of the learned.