The Market of Rejection: 1852–1855
By the age of twenty-one, I had learned that in the eyes of Virginia high society, I was a ledger with only debts and no assets. The first proposal had set the tone. Thomas Aldrich, a tobacco planter, had come to dinner at my father’s invitation. I watched his gaze shift from my face to my wheelchair, and finally to the floor.
“Miss Whitmore is highly educated,” my father, Colonel Whitmore, had insisted. “She reads Greek, speaks fluent French, and manages our household accounts with precision.”
But Thomas didn’t care for Greek or French. He needed a decorative partner who could navigate a ballroom. He declined. So did the second suitor, a widower seeking a physically active mother for his children. The third, fourth, and fifth followed the same pattern. Each rejection carried a specific sting:
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“The wedding would be an embarrassment.”
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“How would she process down the aisle?”
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“I’ve heard she cannot bear children.”
That last rumor, though medically unsubstantiated, rendered me a social pariah. By 1855, my father was desperate. He lowered his standards for wealth and status, offering increasingly lavish dowries. Yet, the answer remained a consistent “no.”
The Tenth Rejection
In January 1856, William Foster, a twice-widowed man of fifty with a reputation for over-indulgence, arrived to inspect the “financial arrangements.” After confirming the estate’s profits, he turned to me with a list of domestic demands. When he realized I could not perform manual labor or manage servants on foot, he deemed the situation “untenable.”
After Foster’s departure, I found my father in his study, a glass of bourbon in his hand and defeat in his eyes. “Father, you can stop,” I said quietly. “I have arranged twelve proposals in four years,” he replied, his voice flat. “Every man has delivered the same message: you are not worth the perceived burden.”
He explained the bleak reality. Upon his death, Virginia law would prevent me from inheriting the estate independently as an unmarried woman with a physical disability. I would be left to the “charity” of a cousin who viewed me as an inconvenience.
A Radical Protection: February 1856
Four weeks later, my father presented a solution so outside the bounds of social norms that I thought he had lost his mind. “I am giving you to Josiah,” he said. “He will be your protector. Your husband.”
I stared at him. Josiah was the estate’s blacksmith—a man of legendary strength known to some as “The Brute” simply because of his immense physical presence. “Eleanor, no man of our social class will marry you,” my father said, pacing the room. “But you need someone loyal. Someone strong enough to carry you and capable enough to manage the tasks you cannot. Josiah is intelligent, gentle, and bound to this estate. He will not abandon you.”
The logic was staggering. Society had discarded me; therefore, my father was using the only resources he had left to ensure my survival. He had observed Josiah for years—noting his literacy (which was illegal, yet tolerated in secret) and his quiet, steady nature.
“Can I meet him?” I asked. “Actually talk to him?”
The Meeting with “The Brute”
The next morning, Josiah was brought to the house. To fit through the parlor door, he had to duck. He stood seven feet tall, with shoulders that seemed to fill the room and hands scarred by years at the forge. He stood with the bowed head of an enslaved person, yet his voice, when he spoke, was deep and unexpectedly soft.
When my father left us alone, the silence was heavy. Josiah sat on the sofa, which creaked under his three hundred pounds of muscle. “Are you afraid of me, Miss?” he asked. “Should I be?” “No. I have never hurt anyone. People call me a brute because of my size, but I am not brutal.”
We began to talk. I asked him if he could read. He hesitated—literacy was a dangerous admission—but finally confessed he had taught himself. We spent the next two hours discussing The Tempest. Josiah’s insights into the character of Caliban—a being treated as a monster but possessing a deeply human soul—were more profound than any I had heard in a classroom.
By the end of that conversation, my fear had evaporated. I saw a man trapped in a body society feared, just as I was trapped in a body society pitied. “If we do this,” I said, “I want you to know I don’t see a monster. I see a person in an impossible situation.” “And I don’t see someone who is ‘unmarriageable,'” he replied. “I think the men who rejected you were fools who couldn’t see the person inside.”

The Stolen Spring: April–May 1856
The arrangement began on April 1st. It wasn’t a legal marriage—society wouldn’t allow it—but a commitment overseen by my father. Josiah moved into a room adjacent to mine. The first weeks were awkward as we navigated the intimacy of my daily care, but Josiah moved with a reverence that preserved my dignity at every turn.
In May, a shift occurred. While watching him work at the forge, I asked if I could try. He positioned my wheelchair near the anvil and taught me to hammer. “Put your shoulders into it,” he encouraged.
As the hammer hit the iron, I felt something I hadn’t felt in fourteen years: physical agency. My legs were still, but my arms were shaping metal. I was no longer fragile. “You are stronger than you think,” Josiah said, holding up my first bent piece of iron. “You just needed the right outlet.”
The Recognition of Beauty
By June, our evening discussions of poetry turned toward the personal. Josiah was reading Keats when I asked him what the most beautiful thing he’d ever seen was. “You, yesterday at the forge,” he said without hesitation. “Covered in soot, laughing while you hammered that nail. You are intelligent, brave, and beautiful. The wheelchair doesn’t change that.”
I reached for his hand. “I think I am falling in love with you, Josiah.” He went still. “Eleanor, it is dangerous. For both of us.” “I don’t care about society’s rules anymore,” I whispered. “You are the only person who truly sees me.”
For five months, we lived in a bubble of stolen happiness. We were careful in public, but in private, we were two people who had found a sanctuary in each other. Josiah treated me with a gentleness and respect that made me feel cherished, not managed.
The Discovery: December 1856
Our sanctuary was shattered on December 15th. My father walked into the library and found us in a moment of undeniable affection. The silence that followed was like ice. “You are in love with him,” he accused.
Josiah dropped to his knees, taking the blame, but I refused to let him. “Yes, I love him,” I said. “And if you punish him, you must punish me. I initiated this.”
After sending Josiah to his room, my father turned to me with a mixture of rage and exhaustion. “Do you understand the scandal? If this is known, you will be ruined. They will call you mad.” “They already call me damaged,” I retorted. “The difference is that with Josiah, I am safe and valued. You put us together. You shouldn’t have given me to someone kind and brilliant if you didn’t want me to love him.”
A Father’s Dilemma
My father sank into his chair. He spoke of his duty to protect me and the harsh reality of the world. He threatened to sell Josiah to the Deep South to “solve” the problem. “Being without him will destroy me,” I said. “For the first time in my life, I am happy. Is your idea of protection worth my misery?”
He sat in silence for a long time. Finally, he looked at me. “I have watched you these nine months. I have seen you smile more than you have in fourteen years. I see how he looks at you.”
He admitted that he had created the situation and that he could not ignore the genuine bond we had formed. But he warned me: if we were to stay together, there was no place for us in Virginia. There was no place for us in the South.
“Are you prepared for that reality?” he asked.
I looked toward the door where Josiah waited, and then back at my father. I thought of the forge, the Shakespearean debates, and the man who saw past the wheelchair to the woman within. “I am prepared for anything,” I said, “as long as I am not alone.”
The road ahead was uncertain—fraught with legal perils and social exile—but as I sat in that library, I realized that my father’s “radical solution” had provided something far greater than mere protection. It had provided a partnership of equals in a world that insisted we were both less than. We were no longer discarded; we were a force of our own.