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The grave of Dr. Charles Bailey Bell at Bellwood
Cemetery in Adams, Tennessee.
The releases of Miller and Bell’s books in 1930 and
1934, respectively, when combined with existing
interest in the “Bell Witch” due largely in part to
Ingram’s earlier book, generated considerably more
interest during the 1930’s than in previous years.
Each year, more people visit Adams, Tennessee
hoping to have an encounter with Kate.
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CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
“Kate” in the Twentieth Century
T HE FACT THAT THE OLD BELL FARM is
private property kept many people away from
the original Bell home site and cemetery;
however there were always some who managed to get
in. By the early 1940’s, the family who owned the
tract of land with the cave that the Bells used for
storage and where Elizabeth Bell and her friends
once played began allowing select visitors to picnic
near the cave’s entrance and explore the first two
rooms on occasion.
Choking Sensation on the Porch
On one occasion in the late 1940’s, the author’s
uncle visited some friends who owned the cave tract
at the time. Several old outbuildings stood on the
property, some of which are believed be built by John
Bell’s immediate family or close-generation
descendants. One of these buildings had been the
home of Joel Egbert Bell, and later his nephew,
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187
James Allen Bell. Built in the late 1840s, the house
was constructed partially of logs and stones salvaged
from John Bell’s house when it was razed in 1843.
Located on what was known by previous
generations as, “Brown’s Ford Bluff,” this house was
where Dr. Henry Sugg, Joel Bell, Allen Bell, and
Reynolds Powell experienced several mysterious
encounters during the Nineteenth Century. The
house was used as a storage building during the
period the author’s uncle visited the place, and the
family who owned the land lived in another old house
nearby.
After visiting the family for the better part of a
spring afternoon, the author’s uncle graciously
accepted their invitation to stay for dinner that
evening. After finishing dinner, he and the man who
lived there decided to go outside for a walk around
the farm to get some fresh air and burn some
calories before night set in.
After walking for some time, they made their way
to the front porch of the old house where they lit
their cigarettes and sat down in two big rocking
chairs. After several minutes of conversation, an
unusually strong gust of wind consumed the porch
and, in the words of the author’s uncle, “All of a
sudden, something just didn’t seem right about that
front porch. I wanted to get my tail out of there in a
hurry!”
As the men continued talking, they began
developing what they later described as a strange,
“choking sensation.” The longer they sat on the front
porch of the old house, the tighter their throats
became – reaching a point where if felt as if a noose
had been placed around each of their necks and was
being slowly tightened.
The strange tightness in their throats subsided
after a short time, giving them a much-needed
188 P A T
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chance to return to the main family house. “We got
back a helluva’ lot faster than walked up there, that’s
for sure!” the author’s uncle later said. The author’s
uncle spoke on many occasions of Kate and his
personal experience at the farm that spring
afternoon. In addition to the many stories about
Kate that he shared with the author shortly before
his death in 1984, he also passed his original copy of
Martin Ingram’s book, “Authenticated History of the
Bell Witch,” to the author.
Tragedy after Theft of John Bell’s Gravestone
Several years after the incident on the front porch
of the old house, three boys from Nashville,
Tennessee went joy riding one night and ended up in
Adams, some 50 miles away, to see what all the talk
about the “Bell Witch” was about. The year was
1951. They had heard many stories of people
experiencing strange encounters while visiting the
cave and the old Bell farm, so they were eager to see
how much “trouble” they could encounter.
Arriving in Adams at around 9:30 P.M., the boys
stopped by several service stations and stores to talk
with local residents with hopes of finding out where
to begin their ghostly adventure. After a bit of small
talk and discussing the “Bell Witch” with several of
the locals, the boys gassed up their car and headed
east on Highway 41 until they reached a dirt road
that turned off the highway.
They slowly drove down the road, observing the
eerie surroundings as they proceeded through the
darkness looking for the land that was, almost a
century and a half earlier, the thriving yet haunted
plantation owned by John Bell. After traveling about
a mile, they noticed the old, brick house on the right-
hand side of the road that a man back at the service
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189
station had spoken of. This house, according to the
man, was “right in the middle of ‘Bell Witch’
country.”
The boys stopped the car, turned off the lights and
motor, then put the gearshift in neutral and began
coasting quietly down the hill past the brick house.
They had been told the land across the road and
down the hill from the old house was at one time
John Bell’s largest field, and that the old Bell home
stood about 400 yards back in the field from the
road’s edge. Atop the hill on the right-hand side of
this large field is the old Bell cemetery, where John
Bell, his wife, and several of their children are
buried.
Tall and dense thickets consumed what was once
John Bell’s front yard and largest field. Even with
the flashlights they had brought along, there was no
way the boys could find their way through the many
acres of thickets to where the Bell home once stood
or up the thorny hill to the cemetery. They discussed
their options as they continued looking into the
thickets in hopes of finding an opening. As the boys
were about to start the car and leave, they noticed
what looked to be an old road off in the thicket to
their left. What was left of the old road led through
the thicket for a good distance before curving and
going up a hill. Curious as to where the road would
take them, the boys started the car and maneuvered
through several yards of dense brush to the old road.
They followed the road up a hill and across a flat
for about a quarter-mile before reaching the end and
getting out of the car. There weren’t nearly as many
thickets on this part of the property as there were
nearer to the main road, so they turned on their
flashlights and began hiking off into the darkness
across a small, sloped hill and then up another hill.
After having made it half way up the second hill,
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the boys shined their flashlights in directions to get a
good sense of their surroundings and what lay
ahead. They were shocked to find that, within fifteen
feet of where they were standing, several gravestones
sat in what looked to be a very old, neglected and
forgotten cemetery nestled among the towering cedar
trees and underneath some brush.
When the boys moved closer to investigate, they
saw the words, “Richard Williams Bell 1811-1857”
inscribed on the largest gravestone. The boys were
astonished – they thought they had already passed
where the old Bell cemetery was, but knew then that
they were actually right on it because of the name,
“Bell” inscribed on one of the stones. They moved to
a smaller stone, about fifteen feet in front of the one
they had just read, and it read, “John Bell 1750-
1820, and his Wife Lucy Bell 1770-1837.”
They sat down to celebrate their prized finding as
they discussed what to do next and how long they
could remain there before having to return to
Nashville. Without a word, two of the boys got up
and began pushing John Bell’s gravestone back and
forth until it became loose to the point they could
pull it from the ground. Each of the two boys carried
one end of the gravestone and the third boy shined
the flashlight as they made their way down the hill,
across the field, and back to their car. Upon arriving
back at their car, they placed John Bell’s gravestone
in the trunk.
They backed down the old road, then turned onto
the main road and followed it to Highway 41 where
they headed towards Nashville. After reaching
nearby Springfield a few minutes later, they took a
shortcut to the Joelton community in northern
Davidson County because one of the boys lived just
south of there. Frightened by what they had done
earlier and the possibility of being followed by
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191
Robertson County law enforcement officials, the boys
continued towards Nashville at a high rate of speed.
Just as they flew past Joelton and headed south
toward where one of them lived, they reached the
infamous, “Devil’s Elbow” curve. The boy who was
driving immediately lost control of the vehicle,
sending it sideways for several hundred feet before
topping an embankment and plunging more than
100 feet into a deep ravine.
They boy driving the car was killed instantly, and
the other two boys suffered only minor injuries.
Several days after the boy’s funeral, the car was
brought to his family’s home so his belongings could
be retrieved before it was scrapped. Upon
opening
the car’s trunk, the boy’s mother discovered, in clear
sight, John Bell’s gravestone.
Being familiar with and believing in the “Bell
Witch” legend herself, the boy’s mother jerked and
tugged on the stone until she got it out and into her
own trunk. She then drove to the area near Adams,
Tennessee where she thought the Bell farm once was
and unloaded the stone, placing it next to the road
and covering it with some brush. She was too late,
however – for just hours earlier, both boys who had
been with her son the night of the gravestone’s theft
were involved in separate, freak-accidents. One was
killed, and the other lost his hand. s
Later in the 1950s, Boston contractor and John
Bell descendant Leslie Covington created a cemetery
in Adams, Tennessee to honor of the family of John
Bell family and their descendants. Known as
“Bellwood,” the cemetery is located on Highway 41
about one mile east of Adams and is easily identified
by its marble front gates and a large monument that
Covington erected at the back of the cemetery. 48
48 Bellwood Cemetery is also discussed in Appendix E
.
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Adjacent to several shady oak trees and
surrounded by a marble fence, lies a small plot of
land reserved for the graves of John Bell’s direct
descendants. Each lot within this small area has its
own headstone, precisely aligned with the so that all
graves can be viewed without having to walk over
them.
The plot reserved for John Bell descendants at
Bellwood Cemetery in Adams, Tennessee.
Several of John Bell’s direct descendants are
buried in this special plot, including surnames such
as Bell, Winters, Turner, Covington, and Abshire, to
name just a few. At the time this plot at Bellwood
was completed, the graves of several John Bell
descendants were exhumed and taken to the plot
from such distant places as Texas and Oklahoma.
This bizarre action explains why the deaths of some
people buried at Bellwood predate the cemetery itself.