earnest.” 34
Kate’s voice blowing through the trees had also
been heard by the other couples and cast a dark
shadow over what had begun as a most enjoyable
Easter Monday. Silent and downhearted, Elizabeth
and Joshua made their way back to the field where
the other couples had gathered in preparation of
34 M.V. Ingram,
Authenticated History of the Bell Witch
, (1894).
160 P A T
F I T Z H U G H
leaving. Given the terrifying and gut-wrenching
event that had just occurred, fishing and frolicking
was the last thing on everyone’s mind.
As the three couples left and began their long stroll
across the meadow, Elizabeth and Joshua’s friends
walked a fair distance behind them. Knowing how
badly their hearts had been broken, there was no
sense in trying to console them — the damage had
been done.
One by one, the young people broke away from the
group and went home. Because their farms were in
the same direction from the river, Elizabeth and
Joshua were the last ones to split from the group. As
they approached the Bell property line, Elizabeth and
Joshua silently parted — never to see each other
again. Kate had now accomplished her second and
final mission, which was to make sure that Elizabeth
Bell and Joshua Gardner didn’t marry.
In the months that followed Easter Monday of
1821, Theny Thorn married David Alex Gooch, and
Rebecca Porter married James Long. Joshua
Gardner soon got his affairs in order and moved to
Henry County in western Tennessee, where he
remained for some time before moving to Weakley
County, Tennessee in 1840. Twice married, Joshua
Gardner had two sons and died at the age of 84 after
a successful career as a magistrate and farmer.
THE BELL WITCH: THE FULL ACCOUNT
161
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
“Kate” Leaves for Seven Years
KATE’S VISITS BECAME FEWER after that
fateful Easter Monday in 1821, and the
power and intellect she once possessed
rapidly diminished. What little Kate had to do with
the Bells was in the form of an occasional
conversation with Lucy Bell or mildly scolding the
Bell children when they did not follow their mother’s
orders.
“Kate” Says Goodbye
Late one afternoon in May of 1821, Lucy Bell, Joel,
Richard, and Elizabeth were talking in the hallway
when it suddenly filled with smoke. The smoke
cleared as quickly as it came, and a round object
resembling a cannon ball rolled down the hallway,
into the front room, and across the floor to the
fireplace. Kate’s voice was then heard, “Goodbye,
Luce and the rest of you. I will be absent for a period
of seven years. I will visit your home, as well as
162 P A T
F I T Z H U G H
every other home in this area, upon my return.
Farewell!” The mysterious ball then shot up the
chimney in a fury of smoke and blue blazes.
While the Bells were happy to learn of Kate’s
departure, Elizabeth, still broken-hearted and
grieving her loss of Joshua Gardner, did not seem
phased. She often spent entire days laying in her
bed crying, hoping, and praying that she would wake
up any moment to discover that Kate was only a bad
dream and that Joshua was waiting for her
downstairs. Nevertheless, knowing the difference
between fantasy and reality, Elizabeth was
determined to deal with her anguish as best she
could.
Elizabeth’s New Suitor
Over time, Elizabeth Bell conquered much of her
anguish and began casually associating with the
man who many times came to comfort her by reciting
poetry and witty sayings, that man being none other
than Professor Richard R.P. Powell, her former
schoolteacher and long-time admirer.
Powell called on Elizabeth more frequently as time
went on, and they slowly grew closer together and
began a courtship. Their courtship lasted two years,
culminating in their marriage on March 21, 1824 at
Red River Baptist Church. 35 Elizabeth had kept the
promise she made three years earlier, that Professor
Powell would be present at her wedding.
Richard Powell’s marriage to Elizabeth Bell was not
his first, however. On December 7, 1815, he married
Esther Scott of Williamson County, Tennessee, and
formerly of Dickson County, Tennessee. 36 Esther
35 Richard Powell
Ciphering Book
, TN Manuscript Accession Number 75-260, p. 222.
36 Richard Powell,
Ciphering Book
, TN Manuscript Accession Number 75-260, p. 179.
THE BELL WITCH: THE FULL ACCOUNT
163
Scott is believed to have been eighteen years Powell’s
senior n and had been married previously. 37 Records
indicate that Esther Powell died in 1821 of
unspecified causes. 38
Richard and Elizabeth Powell made their home on
present-day Route 1012, between the towns of Cedar
Hill and Springfield, Tennessee. Richard Powell
became increasingly involved in the state’s social and
political circles, eventually giving up his job as
schoolmaster to pursue a career in politics. 39
37Williamson County TN Circuit Court,
Minute Book 1
, p. 504.
38 Robertson County TN,
Will Book 3
, pp. 506-507; Robertson County TN,
County Court
Minutes Book 6
, p. 392.
39 A complete biographical sketch of Professor Powell is included in Appendix A.
164 P A T
F I T Z H U G H
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
“Kate” Returns
T HREE PEOPLE LIVED IN THE BELL HOME
after Elizabeth married and moved away in
1824 — Lucy Bell, Richard, and Joel. The
other Bell children made their homes elsewhere in
the Red River community.
Esther Bell and Alex Porter settled on Sturgeon
Creek, Drewry Bell settled across the Red River from
the original Bell farm, John Bell, Jr. built a house on
the Bell farm about a quarter-mile south of the
original house, and Jesse Bell was living about one
mile south of the Bell farm, near what is now
Bellwood Cemetery. They visited Lucy, Richard, and
Joel often, as did the Johnstons, Frank Miles, the
Reverends Gunn and Fort, and other close friends.
The Bell farm was now seemingly back to normal
— no more torment and demonstrations, no more
unexpected visitors lined up outside the door, and no
more “witch doctors” mixing strange concoctions in
the family room. The Bells still had a few infrequent
visitors, but nowhere near the number they had at
THE BELL WITCH: THE FULL ACCOUNT
165
the height of Kate’s disturbances. Few visitors
wanted to spend the night or sit and talk; instead,
they usually just asked the question, “Has it come
back yet?”
January of 1828 came without incident. While
happy that Kate had yet to make her return-visit, her
promised 1828 return loomed in the minds of the
Bells still living in the Red River community. The
subject of Kate’s promised return was discussed but
a few times since her 1821 departure, and Mrs. Bell
took comfort in the notion that she might not return
at all. All of this wishful thinking turned out to be
for nothing, however. For in February of that year,
Kate made good on her promise to revisit the Bells.
Richard Williams Bell wrote of Kate’s return-visit:
“The demonstrations announcing its return were
precisely the same that characterized its first
appearance. Joel occupied a bed in mother's
room, and I slept in another apartment alone.
After considerable scratching on the
weatherboarding on the outside, it appeared in
the same way on the inside, scratching on the bed
post and pulling the cover from my bed as fast as
I could replace it, keeping me up nearly all night.
It went on in this way for several nights, and I
spoke not a word about it, lest I should frighten
mother.
However, one night later, after worrying me for
some time, I heard a noise in mother's room, and
knew at once what was to pay. Very soon, mother
and Joel came rushing into my room, much
frightened, telling me about the disturbance and
something pulling the cover off.
We sat up until a late hour discussing the matter,
satisfied that it was the same old Kate, and agreed
not to talk to the witch, and that we would keep
166 P A T
F I T Z H U G H
the matter a profound secret to ourselves,
worrying with it the best we could, hoping that it
would soon leave, as it did, after disturbing us in
this way for two weeks.” 40
“Kate” Visits John Bell, Jr.
After spending some time at the Bell home with
Lucy, Richard and Joel, Kate then paid a visit to the
man who was undoubtedly her harshest critic and
the mortal whom she feared the most: John Bell, Jr.
Late one night in March of 1828, John Jr. picked
up a military book from his bureau and proceeded to
his chair where he sat down to relax and read by
candlelight. A former soldier, John Jr. was very
interested in military history and spent a good deal of
time reading military books and battle maps. He
often told his friends the reasons why particular
battles were lost and how they possibly could have
been won. He would later in life tell others about
why the Confederacy would never be able to win the
Civil War, although he only lived to see a short part
of it.
As he thumbed through the book’s pages and
studied Napoleon’s actions at Waterloo, Bell’s eyes
grew tired and he decided to read only one more page
before retiring for the evening. Kate was the very last
thing on his mind. As he read the last page and
slowly began nodding off, an old and familiar voice
began filled the room.
“John, I am in…” “Go straight to Hell!” John Jr.
quickly interrupted as he sprung from his chair,
“wherever you have been, or wherever you are, your
proper place is in Hell, and the next visit you make
40 Richard Williams Bell,
Our Family Trouble
, 1846 (Mini-Histories: Nashville, 1985).
THE BELL WITCH: THE FULL ACCOUNT
167
you should go there and stay!” Kate responded,
“Again, John, I am in hopes you will not be as angry
at me on this visit as you were on my last. I shall do
nothing to cause you offense; I have been in the West
Indies for seven years, and…” “Oh shut your nasty
mouth you old bitch from Hell; and stay away from
me, my family, and everyone else!” John Jr. angrily
interrupted.
Maintaining her composure, Kate responded,
“John, I knew you would not understand why I came;
but if you could, you would know that some of the
things I have done will at last result in the best for
succeeding generations.” She continued, “You are
telling me to go to Hell, John; such Spirits as I
sometimes get a vacation, even banishment from
their abode; but I will tell you there are thousands of
human beings now living on this earth who are worse
than I; they are only restrained by their fellow beings.
If, after reaching their future abode, their Spirit could
return to this earth, they would raise a thousand
times more Hell than I have done.” “I fail to
recognize how that could be true!” replied John Jr.
The Past, Present, and Future
“Don’t forget that each one of you will have a
Spirit, and that men on earth are best controlled
through Spiritual influence. If this influence is not
recognized finally, the world will be lost. As you
think of me now, you would add millions of others to
your thoughts and think a thousand times worse of
most of them, if their Spirits came back on earth,”
responded Kate; “there are Spirits millions of years
old, John, that never have been connected with a
body, but were created Spirits. Here on earth, only
the physical part of man, under mental control, is
visible to his fellows. What a difference, John, if you
168 P A T
F I T Z H U G H
knew what they are thinking! I know what you are
thinking now.”
John Jr. responded, “I want you to know what I
am thinking! It is that I would give my life freely if I
could tangibly grasp your form in my arms and
crush you slowly, giving you the pain you caused my
father scores of times, and then throw you straight
into the fires of Hell, if there be any such place!
“You would not be here if you did not know of
your safety. I think you are thrice a demon Spirit;
you belong to a world of demons; you come to this
world where its inhabitants cannot harm you. You
are now neither of this world nor your own — a
wandering thing between this world and some other;
you must be as unhappy as you admit. I feel as if
you would like to get back to your home, if they
would let you stay there. You are too mean for them