No Master Wanted Albino Slave Boy... Until Obese Plantation Lady Bought Him for Herself

No Master Wanted Albino Slave Boy... Until Obese Plantation Lady Bought Him for Herself


On a humid August morning in 1855, a child stood on an auction block in Savannah, Georgia, and not a single person wanted to buy him. His pale skin and colorless eyes marked him as cursed, dangerous, a bearer of bad luck that no plantation owner would risk bringing onto their property. The bidding started at $20, then 15, then 10.

Finally, at just $5, one woman raised her fan. Margaret Dunore, a widow who owned 4,000 acres 12 miles outside the city, paid $12 out of what she called Christian charity. The crowd applauded her generosity. What they did not know was that Margaret had been searching for a child exactly like this one for 3 years. What they could not have imagined was that 73 people would disappear on her property over the next 14 years.

their fates documented in ledgers that local authorities allegedly burned in 1861. But one ledger survived, hidden in a foundation wall, discovered during highway construction in 1959. Inside were measurements, bloodline charts, and something called the purification project. Before we continue with the story of what happened to that albino boy and the hidden compound where Margaret conducted her experiments, I need to ask you something.

Subscribe to this channel and hit that notification bell because we uncover the mysteries that history tried to bury. And please leave a comment telling us what state or city you are listening from. We want to know where our audience is hearing these dark stories. Now, let me take you back to that sweltering afternoon when a widow's terrible vision began to take shape.

The summer heat in Savannah felt like a physical weight, pressing down on the crowd gathered near the waterfront slave market. Margaret Dunore arrived in her carriage, alone as always, a massive woman whose size commanded attention in an era when such girth signaled wealth and power.

At 47 years old, she had been a widow for 13 years, running her late husband's plantation with an iron will that made overseers nervous and neighbors wary. But what truly set Margaret apart was not her appearance or her business acumen. It was the library she had assembled over the past decade. over 300 books on natural philosophy, anatomy, and animal husbandry, with a particular focus on breeding techniques, and hereditary science.

The boy brought to the platform that day was perhaps 11 years old, so thin his ribs showed through his shirt, but it was his coloring that made the crowd fall silent. His skin appeared almost translucent in the harsh sunlight. His hair was white blonde and sparse, and his eyes held a pinkish gray quality that seemed to look through people rather than at them.

The auctioneer, a professional named Cyrus Peton, struggled to hide his discomfort. Lot 47, he announced without his usual enthusiasm. Malechild approximately 11 years from the Hutchinson estate near Augusta. As you can see, he has a particular condition, albinism. The word was not spoken aloud, but everyone understood.

In 1855, Georgia, such children carried heavy superstitious weight among both white and enslaved communities. Many believed they brought crop failures, that they could see ghosts, that they were marked by divine punishment. The mixing of African and European ancestry was common enough on plantations, but albinism created an uncomfortable ambiguity that defied the racial categories upon which the entire system depended.

When bidding opened at $20, not a single hand rose. Peton lowered it repeatedly until reaching $5. Still nothing. People turned away, some making signs against evil. That was when Margaret raised her fan with deliberate slowness, her expression serene. The crowd turned to stare. """"$5 to Mrs. Dunore,"""" Peetton said quickly, relieved to have any bid.

""""Going once, going twice, sold."""" """"Margaret stood, opening her purse with theatrical generosity. I will pay $12 for the poor child,"""" she announced loudly. It is our Christian duty to care for those whom others reject. Several women nodded approvingly. An elderly gentleman called out, """"God bless you, Mrs. Dunore."""" She acknowledged the praise with a gracious smile, """"The very picture of benevolent Christianity.

"""" But as the boy was led to her carriage, her eyes studied him with the cold calculation of a naturalist examining a rare specimen. She had finally found what she needed. subject zero for her purification project. The boy, whose previous owners had called him Thomas, sat pressed into the corner of the carriage during the journey to Belmont Plantation.

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