Daily Gleaner, 1946 03 20
Barbados Mother Proud Of Siamese Twins
BARBADOS March 7:
Barbadians
are trekking in their hundreds to see
the first Siamese twins to be born in
the
West Indies, and on Monday evening
about 12 hours after their birth,
many had to be
refused permission to
see this freak. But by next morning the
pilgrimage began and though
the young
peasant mother has no idea, of the
financial exploitation of her unusual offspring,
visitors are leaving with her, gifts, which
she is receiving with a very proud but wan smile.
She is a slim bit of a
country lass, little more than five feet,
and she told the "Trinidad
Guardian" correspondent today that she is not yet 19. She is proud of her kids, and, surprisingly, is already performing chores about the house. Cephas Thompson, the father of the children, is a fisherman, also in his 19th year.
Glenora Husbands, mother of the children, lives with her stepmother, but her mother is still alive and has during, her lifetime given birth to twins.
The twins have been privately baptised by the Rev. Canon C. W. Johnson, vicar of St. Alban's and St. Silas, and, conforming with the Barbadian penchant for Biblical names, have been called Mary and Martha.
The
village of Weston, nine miles from
Bridgetown, and the house of the birth,
is flanked
on either side by canes and is on an elevation commanding an excellent view of the ocean.
When
the "Guardian" correspondent saw the
girls they were both sleeping with their
hands
entwined around each other.
Dr.
Gibbons, who sent them to hospital for
an X-ray, is of the opinion they will
live if they get
proper treatment.
[Announcing
the birth of the Siamese twins in Barbados, an Associated Press despatch
states that the twins, joined along the chest, extending to the abdominal region, are doing well.]
