You use your arms everyday. For brushing your teeth, combing your hair, getting dressed – but what if you were born without them? In nineteenth century Somerset, there lived an extraordinary man who not only made a living as a farmer, but also walked away victorious in a fight – without arms or shoulders!
PHENOMENON.- A London Paper says, “The following account of a most extraordinary phenomenon of Nature may be depended on for its authenticity :- In the village of Dicheat, four miles from Shepton Mallet, in Somersetshire, in the year 1765, a woman, of the name of Kingston, was delivered of a stout boy, without arms or shoulders. This singular man is probably still alive; he was living, to the writer’s knowledge, six years ago. He possesses, without the usual appendages of arms, all the strength, power and dexterity, of the ablest and most regular-made men, and exercises every function of life. He feeds, dresses, and undresses himself, combs his own hair, shaves his beard with the razor in his toes, cleans his shoes, lights his fire, writes out his own bills and accounts, and does almost every other domestic business. Being a farmer by occupation, he performs the usual business of the field, fodders his cattle, makes his ricks, cuts his hay, catches his horse, and saddles and bridles him with his feet and toes. He can lift ten pecks of beans with his teeth; with his feet he throws a large sledge hammer farther than any other man can with his arms; and he has fought a stout battle, and come off victorious. These facts are notorious in most parts of Somersetshire.”
Stamford Mercury, 3 September, 1819.