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The two figures born on this date operated in vastly different worlds — early nineteenth-century Charleston commerce and mid-twentieth-century English suburbia — yet both built their careers on the systematic exploitation of human vulnerability. James Jervey worked within the legal and financial architecture of the antebellum South, co-owning slave-trading operations in one of America's busiest markets for human bondage. More than a century later, Graham Young, known as the Teacup Poisoner, conducted a methodical campaign of poisoning against family members and coworkers, treating his victims as subjects in a private experiment. One man's crimes were sanctioned by law and social standing; the other's were hidden behind domesticity and routine.

September 7, 1947 - Graham Young

What distinguished Young from other poisoners was the persistence of the compulsion across his entire life — beginning in childhood, surviving institutionalization, and resuming almost immediately upon release. His method required patience, proximity, and the trust of those around him, making ordinary domestic and workplace settings the sites of deliberate harm sustained over years.

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September 7, 1784 - James Jervey

His career spanned law, banking, and civic leadership in antebellum Charleston — roles that lent him standing and respectability in a city whose economy was deeply intertwined with the domestic slave trade. Among his ventures was a co-ownership stake in Jervey, Waring & White, a slave-trading firm that operated alongside his more publicly honored pursuits. The obituary that mourned him as a "worthy citizen" and "estimable man" made no mention of this dimension of his professional life, reflecting how thoroughly such commerce was normalized within the community that eulogized him.

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