Josephine Myrtle Corbin (May 12, 1868[1] – May 6, 1928) was an American sideshow performer born as a dipygus. This referred to the fact that she had two separate pelvises side by side from the waist down, as a result of her body axis splitting as it developed. Each of her smaller inner legs was paired with one of her outer legs. She was said to be able to move her inner legs, but they were too weak for walking.
Myrtle Corbin | |
---|---|
Born | Josephine Myrtle Corbin May 12, 1868 |
Died | May 6, 1928 Cleburne, Texas, U.S. | (aged 59)
Other names | The four-legged woman |
Height | 5 ft (1.5 m) |
Spouse |
James Clinton Bicknell
(m. 1886) |
Children | 5 |
Early life and family
editCorbin was born in Lincoln County, Tennessee. Corbin's parents were William H. Corbin, aged 25 at the time of his daughter's birth, and Nancy Corbin (née Sullins), aged 34.[2] Both parents were described by physicians who examined the infant shortly after her birth as being very similar in appearance, "both having auburn hair, blue eyes, and very fair complexion"; in fact, they looked so similar that the physicians felt compelled to point out that they were not "blood kin".[2] The Corbins had four children in total, including a child from Nancy's first marriage.[1][2]
Myrtle's birth was not marked by anything "peculiar about the labour or delivery" according to her mother. Doctors who examined the child shortly after her birth noted that a breech presentation "would have proved fatal to the infant, and possibly to the mother."[3] Corbin soon showed herself to be a strong child, weighing 10 lb (4.5 kg) three weeks after the birth, and it was reported in a journal published later that year that she "nurses healthily" and was "thriving well".[3]
Career
editCorbin entered the sideshow circuit with the moniker "Four-Legged Girl from Texas" when she was 13 years old; one of her first promotional pamphlets described her as being as "gentle of disposition as the summer sunshine and as happy as the day is long."[4] Her popularity in this industry was such that other showmen turned to exhibiting four-legged gaffs (falsified performances). When Corbin herself was no longer performing, there were several phony four-legged women to whom audiences could turn.[4]
Presence in medical literature
editTeratologists in medical journals and encyclopedias in the 19th century classified Corbin's anomaly using several different, yet equally complex, terms, according to conventions of the time. Some referred to her as a "dipygus dibrachius tetrapus",[2] others named her condition "'posterior dichotomy,' subvariety schizorachis".[5] One doctor, Brooks H. Wells, described her as "female, belonging to the monocephalic, ileadelphic class of monsters by fusion."[6]
"She is about five feet high, has fair skin, blue eyes, and curly hair, and is very intelligent. A stranger, to see her in company, would only think her unusually broad across her hips, and with the carriage usual to one with clubbed foot. I have known Mrs. B. since she was a tiny child, as the 'four-legged girl,' but never realised the perfect dual development of both external and internal genital organs until she became my patient in [a] case of pregnancy" — Lewis Whaley, quoted in the British Medical Journal, 1889 [7]
Personal life
editAt age 18, she married James Clinton Bicknell, with whom she had four daughters and a son.
In the spring of 1887 approximately a year after marrying Bicknell, Corbin became pregnant for the first time: her condition was discovered by Dr. Lewis Whaley, of Blountsville, Alabama, who was sent for after Corbin had experienced pain in her left side, fever, headache, and a decreased appetite.[2] In addition, the physician noted that "vomiting and amenorrhoea had persisted for two months".[8] Whaley wrote up the case for the Atlanta Medical and Surgical Journal, which led to a resurgence of interest in Myrtle throughout the late 1880s, now known in medical journals as 'Mrs. B.'[4]
Examining Corbin, Whaley discovered that the duplication of her external sexual organs was mirrored by a similar duplication internally. He determined that it was in her left uterus that Mrs. B. was pregnant. According to Whaley, upon being told that she was pregnant, she replied in disbelief, saying "If it had been in my right side I would come nearer believing you are correct."[8] From this comment, physicians determined that Corbin preferred intercourse in the right side, and this fact was commented upon in several subsequent reports.[9] The pregnancy caused Corbin to become gravely ill, and after consulting with colleagues, Whaley decided to perform an abortion eight weeks after her initial examination. She was, reportedly, between three and four months pregnant at the time.[6] She made a full recovery, and the procedure (as well as her unique anatomy), did not prevent her from successfully carrying subsequent pregnancies to term.[2][8] As medical journals across the United States and around the world turned renewed attention to a now mature Corbin, details about her personality revealed a sense of the woman: One article noted that "The lady, Mrs. B.... the Myrtle Corbin of days gone by, [is] attractive in face, physically well, and able to attend to all her household duties",[5] while she was described elsewhere as being "very intelligent"[7] and "a refined woman, of some musical taste."[2]
Death
editShe died in Cleburne, Texas, on May 6, 1928. Her casket was covered in concrete and various family members kept watch until it was fully cured. This was to prevent grave robbers from stealing her corpse. Several medical practitioners and private collectors offered financial compensation for her corpse.
Gallery
edit-
Broadside of Myrtle Corbin, published between 1871 and 1881
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Corbin in 1882
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Corbin with her husband and daughter in later life
Cultural references
edit- In 2015 Graywolf Press published Four-Legged Girl by Diane Seuss. The 88 page collection of poems was a finalist for the 2016 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry.
References
edit- ^ a b Myrtle Corbin, the Four-Legged Woman of Blount County, 23 April 2009
- ^ a b c d e f g Jaggard, William Wright. "Joined Twins." Cyclopaedia of the Surgical Diseases of Children, Medical and Surgical (Volume I). Edited by John M. Keating. J. B. Lippincott Company, 1889, p. 933
- ^ a b Parvin, Theophilus. The Western Journal of Medicine, Volume III. T. Parvin & Co, 1868, p. 585
- ^ a b c Bogdan, Robert. Freak Show: Presenting Human Oddities for Amusement and Profit. The University of Chicago Press, 1988, p. 230
- ^ a b "The Case of Pregnancy in a Double Monster." The British Medical Journal, Volume 2, Number 1454 (10 November 1888), p. 1059
- ^ a b Wells, Brooks. "A Unique Monstrosity." American Journal of Obstetrics (1888), p. 1265
- ^ a b Whaley, Lewis. quoted in "The Case of Pregnancy in a Double Monster." The British Medical Journal, Volume 2, Number 1463 (12 January 1889), p. 96.
- ^ a b c "Pregnancy in a Double Monster." British Medical Journal, Volume 2, Number 1447 (22 September 1888), p. 676
- ^ Gould, George, and Walter Pyle. Anomalies and Curiosities of Medicine, W. B. Saunders, 1898, p.194