The children all had the same eyes.
Not blue, not brown, but a pale gray that resembled morning fog drifting over the Altamaha River. Their gaze seemed unusually aware, as if they understood more than their years allowed. Anyone who looked closely noticed it immediately.
Over the course of four years, twelve children were born on one plantation.
Twelve children with similar gray eyes, sandy-colored hair, and pale complexions that stood out beneath the Georgia sun.
Twelve children, born to different mothers—but sharing one father.
His name was Edmund Callaway, and the plantation was known as Whiteall.
No one spoke openly about it. In the Georgia lowlands of the 1830s, certain realities existed quietly beneath everyday life. They were visible to many, but rarely acknowledged.
Like the river flooding each spring, or the rice fields filling with insects in the humid summer air.
And like the power a plantation owner held over the people who worked his land.
But the pattern at Whiteall felt different.
This was not an isolated event whispered about and forgotten. It appeared deliberate, repeated, and impossible to ignore.
Twelve children in four years. Twelve mothers. One father.
A pattern too clear to dismiss.
Life on the Whiteall Plantation

Whiteall plantation stood along a bend of the Altamaha River, roughly forty miles inland from Georgia’s coast. The region was famous for rice cultivation.
Rice farming required constant water management. Fields had to be flooded and drained with precision, following the tides and seasonal cycles. The labor demanded knowledge and experience.
Many enslaved workers on plantations like Whiteall had been brought from rice-growing regions of West Africa, where generations had mastered these agricultural techniques. Their knowledge helped build the wealth of plantation owners across the southern coast.
Edmund Callaway understood the value of that expertise.
In 1832 he was forty-six years old and the third generation of his family to manage Whiteall. By most accounts he was intelligent, disciplined, and focused on the profitability of his land. He believed maintaining skilled workers was better for long-term success than constantly replacing them.
Under his management, Whiteall became one of the most productive rice plantations in the area.
Yet Callaway was also known as a private man. He rarely socialized beyond necessary business dealings. His wife Margaret had passed away from illness in 1828, leaving him to raise their young son Charles.
From the outside, Callaway’s life seemed devoted entirely to the plantation and his responsibilities.
But the people who lived and worked there began noticing patterns that told a different story.
Adeline: The Witness
Among the plantation’s residents was a young woman named Adeline.
Born in 1815, she was the daughter of Phoebe, a cook who worked in the main house. Phoebe had roots in the Gullah community along Georgia’s coastal islands and carried cultural traditions that blended African heritage with local life.
Adeline grew up learning the rhythms of plantation life: when to avoid certain fields, how to navigate relationships with overseers, and how to find small moments of comfort among friends and family.
By the time she turned seventeen, she worked alongside her mother in the main house kitchen.
There she quietly observed everything.
And it was there she first sensed something troubling.
One evening, after most of the household had gone to sleep, Adeline heard a brief cry echo down the hallway. It was quickly silenced. She assumed it was nothing unusual—houses often creaked and echoed in the quiet of night.
But three days later, a young woman named Charity came to her cabin.
Charity looked shaken. Her voice trembled as she spoke.
“Something happened,” she whispered.
She did not describe everything directly. She did not need to.
Adeline understood.
In the plantation world, people rarely spoke openly about such matters. The risks were too great.
Within months, Charity was expecting a child.
When the baby was born, the resemblance was unmistakable.
Pale hair. Gray eyes.
Features that pointed to Edmund Callaway.
The child was a girl. Charity named her Hope.
A Pattern Emerges
Adeline helped care for the child, assisting Charity whenever exhaustion from daily labor made motherhood difficult.
Hope grew quickly and became beloved within the community.
But six months later, another child was born.
Then another.
Each child shared similar features.
Different mothers. The same father.
By the time the third baby arrived, Adeline realized what she was witnessing.
A pattern.
She began quietly keeping track.
Not on paper—reading and writing could be dangerous skills for enslaved people to display—but in memory.
She counted births, seasons, and the times certain women were summoned to work near the main house.
By 1835, six children had been born with the same distinctive appearance.
Each mother carried the weight of a situation she could not safely discuss. Each family faced emotions they could rarely express openly.
Adeline watched it all and made a silent promise to herself.
She would remember.
If the world refused to acknowledge what was happening, someone had to keep track of the truth.
The Keeper of Memory
Over the next few years, more children were born.
Seven.
Eight.
Nine.
Ten.
Adeline noticed something else as well.
The women chosen were often those who attracted little attention—quiet individuals who moved through daily life without conflict. Their invisibility had once protected them.
Now it made them vulnerable.
By 1837 the pattern was impossible for Adeline to ignore.
Ten children shared the same unmistakable features.
She carried the knowledge alone, afraid that speaking openly could bring punishment upon the women and children involved.
But silence carried its own burden.
Night after night she lay awake, repeating the names in her mind like a quiet record of events.
Charity. Louisa. Sarah. Ruth. Grace. Dorcas.
Each name connected to a child.
Each child connected to the same man.
Quiet Resistance
Meanwhile, life on the plantation slowly changed.
Women began avoiding assignments that required them to work inside the main house. They traded tasks with one another, created excuses, and quietly reorganized their schedules whenever possible.
It was not open rebellion.
It was quiet resistance.
An informal network formed among the women, helping protect each other whenever they could.
Adeline played an important role in this network. She guided decisions and helped coordinate small changes that allowed the system to function without attracting too much attention.
Sometimes the strategy worked.
Sometimes it did not.
By 1838, twelve children had been born with the same gray eyes and sandy hair.
Adeline realized the story needed to survive beyond her memory.
Writing the Record
Her solution came in the form of an elderly woman named Esther.
Esther was sixty-three years old and one of the few people on the plantation who could read and write. Years earlier, a visiting minister had secretly taught her basic literacy.
One evening, Adeline approached Esther with a request.
“I need you to write something down,” she said quietly.
Adeline shared everything she had witnessed—the names, the births, the patterns.
Using scraps of discarded paper and ink made from crushed berries, Esther slowly began recording the events. Each letter was formed carefully, sometimes taking minutes to complete a single word.
The record grew page by page.
Hidden beneath floorboards in Esther’s cabin, the document preserved details that no official record would ever acknowledge.
Together, the two women created a written account of what had happened at Whiteall.
A Secret Reaches the Outside World
In 1840, a traveling minister named Reverend Thomas Pike visited the plantation.
Unlike many others, Pike treated the enslaved community with a measure of respect and listened to their concerns.
Adeline eventually shared part of the story with him.
Pike understood the seriousness of what he had heard.
Quietly, he began writing letters and collecting testimonies. Rather than making direct accusations, he allowed questions to circulate within social circles and newspapers.
Soon rumors spread among neighboring plantation owners.
Edmund Callaway realized that his private actions were becoming widely discussed.
The Children Are Sold
In early 1841, Callaway responded decisively.
The children were sold.
Not all at once, but gradually—sent to different parts of the South through private transactions.
Families were separated.
Hope was among the first to leave, taken to Mississippi.
Adeline watched as the children she had helped raise disappeared one by one.
There was nothing she could do except remember.
Aftermath
Edmund Callaway passed away in 1843 after an illness. His son Charles inherited Whiteall and continued running the plantation.
Adeline remained there until 1845, when she herself was sold to another plantation in Alabama.
But the written record she and Esther created survived.
Reverend Pike safeguarded the papers during the Civil War. Decades later, they were discovered by another minister, who added further research and preserved the documents in a historical archive.
In 1971, a graduate student researching enslaved women’s resistance uncovered the collection.
The documents became known as The Whiteall Record.
They contained the names, the dates, and the testimonies of the women who had lived through those years.
The Legacy
The plantation itself no longer exists. The buildings disappeared long ago, and the rice fields have returned to marshland.
But the story remains.
Descendants of the children have since learned about the Whiteall record and the courage of the two women who preserved it.
Adeline and Esther ensured that the truth did not disappear.
Their quiet act of documentation transformed memory into history.
And their work reminds us that even in times when voices were ignored and stories suppressed, people still found ways to preserve the truth for future generations.
Because sometimes the most powerful resistance is simply refusing to let a story be forgotten.