ridicule escalated, and John Bell was on the
receiving end.
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CHAPTER FIFTEEN
John Bell’s Final Days
T HE AFFLICTION that once affected only Bell’s
tongue and jaws now affected his entire body.
He frequently encountered seizures and other
violent episodes that often struck without warning
and left him without strength for several days at a
time. John Bell’s episodes grew more intense and
frequent as his health continued to deteriorate.
John Bell’s Shoes Fly Off
Early one morning in October of 1820, John Bell
and one of his younger sons, Richard, set out
walking towards the hog pen to separate some hogs.
Shortly after they began their walk, John Bell’s shoe
quickly flew off his foot. Richard helped him put the
shoe back on, securing it with a double knot. After
they resumed their walk, Bell's other shoe flew off as
quickly as the first one did. Regardless of how tight
his shoes were tied, they repeatedly flew off his feet
as quickly as Richard could put them back on. This
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139
exercise lasted until they reached the hog pen, at
which time Bell removed both of his shoes and
relaxed his feet before tending to the hogs.
They began walking back to the house after they
finished separating the hogs and John Bell’s shoes
began flying off his feet again, just as they did earlier.
Bell suddenly felt a hard blow to his head as he
stopped to retie his shoes. He described the blow as
a hard, stinging slap in the face. Now very upset and
beginning to feel light-headed, Bell sat down on a log
beside the road to regain his composure. His body
began trembling and his face twitched uncontrollably
as he became overtaken by a seizure.
The seizure was not severe, and upon its passing,
Bell looked up to the sky and said a long, fervent
prayer asking again, “Why?” Feeling much better
after having said the prayer and resting for a few
minutes, Bell walked back to the house with his son.
They encountered no more problems that day.
The Affliction Worsens
Upon returning, John Bell took to his bed for a
long nap. Over the next several weeks, he lacked the
strength and determination to go out into the fields
and spent increasingly more time in bed as his
health rapidly deteriorated. He never went outside
the house again. What little that was heard from
Kate during this time was a far cry from grapes and
hazelnuts. She sang louder and more frequently
during this period, as if she was celebrating Bell’s
demise.
Both Lucy and John Jr. stayed by John Bell’s side
day and night, comforting him and praying for the
Almighty to release whatever curse had befell him so
he could once again have a normal life.
Unfortunately, this would never happen. Friends
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visited often, but at this late stage of Bell’s life, there
was nothing they could do but pray for John Bell’s
deliverance from the malevolent Spirit that had
tormented him so long.
It was apparent to those who visited that Kate
intended to torment Bell increasingly during his final
and most painful days. While Kate refrained from
speaking during Bell’s last days, she made her
presence known by singing hymns in multiple,
simultaneous voices, and by covering the dell with
flitting candles as she had several years earlier. On
occasion, people who came to visit Bell reported
hearing the voices of small children quoting scripture
and singing hymns as they walked up the lane to the
house, and a constant, cold drizzle falling over the
dell outside the Bell home at night — all of this
reported during John Bell’s final days.
The Death of John Bell
One morning in December of 1820, John Bell did
not awaken at daybreak as he normally did, so Lucy
and John Jr. thought it best to let him sleep until
after breakfast. Elizabeth went upstairs to awaken
him shortly after breakfast, where she discovered
that his breathing had become irregular and that he
had apparently lost consciousness. Hearing
Elizabeth’s cries for help, both Lucy Bell and John
Jr. rushed up the stairs to see what had happened.
John Jr. walked over to the cupboard where his
father’s medicine was stored and discovered that the
medicine had been replaced by a smoky-looking vial
that was one-third full of an unknown, dark liquid.
After checking with others who knew nothing
about how the vial had gotten there, Lucy and John
Jr. sent for the family doctor, George Hopson.
Despite the seven-mile buggy ride from Port Royal,
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141
Hopson arrived quickly as did Alex Gunn, Frank
Miles, John Johnston, and Richard Powell. After
carefully examining the vial and its contents, Dr.
Hopson reported, “I have no idea what this liquid is
or the purpose of it being here; however, I am
absolutely sure it’s the same odor I detected near Mr.
Bell’s face!”
After a short period of silence, a shrill voice filled
the room and exclaimed, “It's useless for you to try to
relieve Ol’ Jack, I have got him this time; he will
never get up from that bed again!” “No he will not,
he is a bad rascal and will spend eternity in hell,”
exclaimed another voice. “For it is written that
repentance is no recourse against the sins of the
father,” exclaimed the voice of a small child. “For
this man dies and suffers the fruits of his evil forever
just as other men shall in future generations,” the
first voice proclaimed. “And it shall be so, and it
shall be so,” all three voices said in unison.
“Listen! This liquid is something I have never seen
before; it’s not medicine, and I think it’s in my
patient’s best interest that you tell me what it is and
how much you gave him!” Dr. Hopson angrily
exclaimed “Doctor, there is no use in trying to
engage this worthless, demonic jackass in any type of
intelligent conversation,” John Jr. exclaimed. Kate
then replied to Hopson, saying, “I put it there, and
gave Ol’ Jack a big dose of it last night while he was
asleep, which fixed him!” “Yes, it fixed him,” said a
child’s voice coming from the other side of the room.
John Bell suddenly began jerking and turning his
head from side to side, trying desperately to say
something but to no avail. Bell’s mysterious jerks
continued for several minutes despite Dr. Hopson’s
best efforts to calm him. After vomiting several
times, he quickly calmed and became unconscious
once again. Everyone noticed what looked like whip
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marks all over his face, however no sounds were
heard during Bell’s episode.
The group decided to test the vial’s contents on the
family cat. Alex Gunn caught and held the cat as
John Jr. poured some of the liquid into its mouth.
The cat fell to its side, stretched and kicked for a
short time, and then died. Everyone decided that the
vial and its contents should be destroyed at once.
Frank Miles volunteered to throw it into the fire.
“No, don’t do that,” ordered Dr. Hopson; “I would like
to take this strange vial with me and analyze its
contents.” “Yes, that is what needs to be done; I
want to know what it was that Kate gave to John. If
it can kill our cat that quickly, I am sorrowfully
afraid that my husband’s end is near,” said Lucy
Bell.
“Oh, this is absolute nonsense! Can you not see
that it no longer matters? The man is dying, for
God’s sake! Can you not let him die in peace so as
not to be clouded by the additional controversy of
what might be in that bottle? The doctor has much
better things to do than play games with this so-
called “witch” by analyzing what is in the vial. John
Bell is dying! It doesn’t matter what is in the vial or
how it got there!” Richard Powell angrily exclaimed as
he jerked the vial away from Dr. Hopson and threw it
into the fire. When the vial hit the fire, a popping
sound was heard and it burst into a bright, blue
flame that burned out quickly.
John Bell remained in a coma for the rest of the
day and night, as Lucy Bell, John Jr. and John
Johnston stayed by his side and comforted him. On
the following morning, December 20th, John Bell
breathed his final breath. Kate began singing hymns
and laughing fervently upon his passing, not letting
up until the end of the day. Nothing further was
heard from Kate until Bell’s funeral.
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143
“Kate” Sings at John Bell’s Funeral
John Bell was laid to rest in the Bell family
cemetery, located on a cedar-covered knoll some 300
yards north of the Bell home. It was a bright winter
day, and friends from all over the countryside came
to pay their last respects. Bell’s funeral, conducted
by Reverend Sugg Fort and the Revs. Thomas and
James Gunn, was one of the largest ever held in
Robertson County. All three preachers were very
close friends of the Bells despite John Bell’s
excommunication from the church two years earlier.
As they promised, their respect for him remained
until the very end.
As the large crowd of family and friends began to
disperse after Bell’s burial, Kate began laughing
hysterically and sang, “Row me, O Row me, Row me
up some brandy O,” which continued until the last
person had left the cemetery.
John Bell’s Unanswered Request
In hopes of being reinstated into the fellowship of
Red River Baptist Church, John Bell had in 1819
requested a review of the events that resulted in his
excommunication the previous year. The matter was
assigned to a committee representing the leadership
of five different churches, which recommended Bell‘s
reinstatement.
The matter of Bell’s reinstatement frequently
appeared on the church meeting agenda but was
never taken up, always being “postponed till next
conference.” At the time of Bell’s death, the matter
still had not been taken up. The lone entry in the
church minutes for the month of December 1820
stated, “No conference in December.” 30
30
Red River Baptist Church Minutes (1791-1826)
, p. 215.
144 P A T
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CHAPTER SIXTEEN
Hearts are Broken
I N THE WEEKS THAT FOLLOWED John Bell’s
death, many friends and neighbors visited his
family to comfort them and share in their grief.
The reason or reasons why Kate tormented Bell to
his death were no longer of concern, as there was
now a great feeling of relief in knowing he was no
longer suffering the pain he had been forced to
endure in the last four years of his life. Kate’s visits,
now fewer and less frequent, centered more around
Elizabeth than other members of the Bell family. It
appeared that she was extending sympathy to
Elizabeth by comforting her as she grieved the loss of
her father.
Kate ceased abusing Elizabeth and speaking
unfavorably of her courtship with Joshua Gardner,
and Elizabeth’s much-needed feelings of relief were
obvious to those around her — her mischievous
smile began to reappear, the circles below her eyes
and the bruises on her arms went away, the paleness
of her face was replaced with a rosy-red complexion,
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145
and her mood became very cheerful compared to
what it had been the last four years.
Elizabeth’s changes were due not only to having
gotten over the death of her father, but also renewed
optimism in her relationship with Joshua Gardner.
The Relationship Grows Stronger
While Elizabeth’s renewed optimism was quite
strong, there still existed the fear of the unknown.
Did Kate’s newly found silence about the relationship
mean that she now approved of it? What if she
disregarded Kate’s earlier warnings about marrying
Joshua Gardner if he proposed — would they suffer
the same fate as her father? These and other
questions often ran through Elizabeth’s mind, fueling
the constant struggle in her heart between love and
fear.
The two lovers spent much time discussing their
plans to possibly marry and move far away from the
land that had brought them much fear and suffering
for so long, sometimes nearly crushing their hearts
in an inescapable vise. They were very eager to move
away; however, they decided to give the matter more
time to make sure Kate did not rescind her implied
approval of their courtship.
Joshua Gardner continued his bold and relentless
pursuit of Elizabeth, often telling her, “Nothing is