They were born enslaved in Whiteville, North Carolina, and endured a lifetime of exploitation.


 Sold multiple times, they were taken “on the road” to perform at local fairs, subjected to medical examinations, and displayed in so-called “freak show exhibits”—a practice that tragically reflects a long history of the objectification of Black and Brown bodies.


Their story reached far beyond North Carolina. These exhibits took them across the United States, into Canada, and even overseas, where they met Queen Victoria and other dignitaries. Marketed as the “Two-Headed Nightingale,” they eventually became part of the Barnum circus, their lives reduced to spectacle.


In 1912, both sisters died just hours apart, on the same land where they had once been enslaved. That land, however, carried a powerful legacy: it had been purchased by their father after emancipation, transforming a site of bondage into one of resilience and family heritage.

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