and the book’s 1894 publication date reflect Ingram’s
honoring the Bell family’s request that the account
not be published until after all of John Bell’s
immediate family had died. “Our Family Trouble”
was also published by Mini-Histories in 1985.
72
Route Guide – The Sunset Limited
, Amtrak, 2000.
312 P A T
F I T Z H U G H
The second youngest child of John and Lucy Bell,
Richard Williams Bell was born at the Bell farm in
Robertson County, Tennessee. He spent his entire
life as a successful farmer in the Red River area and
was married three times – to Sallie Gunn, Susan
Gunn, and Elizabeth Orndorf. Among his three
wives, two of whom were daughters of the Reverends
Thomas and James Gunn, he had two children.
He purchased a tract of land atop the hill at
Brown’s Ford Bluff from his brother, Joel Egbert Bell,
in 1855, where he remained until his death two years
later. His son, Allen Bell, then inherited the land.
This land is not far from where the original Bell home
stood, and is directly above the Bell Witch Cave.
Many strange things have happened on this land and
in the house that once stood there.
Richard Williams Bell died in 1857 at the young
age of 46 years, and is buried along with his parents
and several siblings in the old Bell cemetery near
Adams, Tennessee.
Joel Egbert Bell (1813-1890)
Although too young at the time of the disturbances
to remember many details, Joel Bell later became
very knowledgeable about Kate by listening to his
mother and siblings tell of their remarkable
encounters with her.
After the original Bell house was razed, Joel Bell
used some of the logs and stones to build his house
on Brown’s Ford Bluff, a hill overlooking the Red
River about a half-mile from where the original Bell
house stood and directly above the Bell Witch Cave.
A number of strange things happened in this house.
During the winter of 1852, Dr. Henry Sugg
experienced an incident where Kate shook and
rattled the vials in his medicine bag as he tended to a
THE BELL WITCH: THE FULL ACCOUNT
313
sick child at this house. Three years later, Joel Bell
moved to nearby Springfield and sold the land and
house to Richard Williams Bell, who in turn left it to
his son, Allen Bell, when he died in 1857. About
1861, Allen Bell was discharged from the
Confederate Army due to illness. While recuperating
at his home, he was visited one night by Reynolds
Powell, son of Elizabeth and Richard Powell. The two
men reported being harassed by Kate up until the
wee hours of the next morning.
Over the course of many years, Joel Bell cultivated
a good friendship with Martin Ingram, author of the
book, “Authenticated History of the Bell Witch,” and
shared many stories about Kate with him.
The youngest child of John and Lucy Bell, Joel
Egbert Bell was born at the Bell farm in Robertson
County, Tennessee and spent his childhood and
many of his adult years in the area. He married
twice and had fourteen children.
Bell moved his family to nearby Springfield in
1855, where he spent the remainder of his life as a
successful farmer and well-respected citizen. Joel
Egbert Bell died in 1890, and is buried in a rural
area just outside Springfield, Tennessee.
Joshua Gardner (1800-1884)
One of nine children,
Joshua Gardner was
born in Robertson
County and spent his
childhood on a farm
situated along present-
day State Route 256.
Although he had very
few direct encounters
with Kate, Gardner
314 P A T
F I T Z H U G H
figures prominently into the legend by virtue of
having been Elizabeth “Betsy” Bell’s suitor and fiancé
during the terrifying period of Kate’s disturbances.
Kate strongly disapproved of Elizabeth and Joshua’s
engagement, and voiced her disapproval to Elizabeth
every time she got the chance.
Kate, despite never having said anything bad
about Gardner himself, provided Elizabeth no reason
for her disapproval of their engagement other than,
“You will not have happiness with Joshua Gardner,
and future generations will see it true.” After giving
the matter much thought and enduring considerable
agony, Elizabeth finally broke off the engagement.
Not long after that fateful day in 1821, Joshua
Gardner wrapped up his affairs and left the area,
settling in Henry County, Tennessee where in 1829
he married Sarah Donelson and had two children.
Joshua became a successful farmer and served as a
magistrate for several years.
Joshua Gardner’s younger brother, John, became
the first president of the Nashville and North Western
Railroad, which is now part of the CSX Railroad.
John Gardner had a successful political career,
serving as a state Senator for several years and later
attending the 1870 Tennessee Constitutional
Convention.
Joshua Gardner left Henry County, Tennessee in
1840 and settled in Weakley County near Gardner’s
Station, a small town named for his younger brother.
He purchased 228 acres of land and began farming
it, using his profits to purchase additional land that
was once estimated to have been more than 1,800
acres.
Although Easter Monday of 1821 was the last time
Joshua Gardner and Elizabeth Bell ever saw each
other, he became friends with Richard Powell and
even signed a petition to the Tennessee State
THE BELL WITCH: THE FULL ACCOUNT
315
Legislature requesting financial assistance for
Powell’s family after a series of misfortunate events.
The author feels that it was not Richard Powell whom
Gardner was concerned about, but the well-being of
his lost love, Elizabeth.
After Sarah Donelson’s death, Gardner remarried
and continued farming successfully up until his
death in 1884. Joshua Gardner is buried in Weakley
County, Tennessee near the present-day town of
Dresden. 73
Reverend Sugg Fort (1776-1829)
Reverend Sugg Fort was Pastor of Red River
Baptist Church during the time of the Bell
disturbances, and with other clergymen in the area,
tried to determine Kate’s identity and purpose while
comforting the Bell family as much as possible.
The youngest of nine children born to Elias and
Sarah Sugg Fort, Reverend Fort was born in
Edgecombe County, North Carolina and moved to
Tennessee with his family in 1788, settling between
the Red River and Elk Fork Creek in what would
later become the northwestern end of Robertson
County. His father, Elias Fort, was actively involved
in the Tar River Association, a religious advocacy
group in North Carolina whose membership included
the church John and Lucy Bell attended, Union
Baptist Church, before they moved to Tennessee.
Reverend Sugg Fort married Elizabeth Diggs in
December of 1801, and they had two children before
her death in February of 1805. He never remarried.
During this time, Elias Fort was the Pastor of Red
River Baptist Church while two of his sons, Sugg and
Josiah, served as clerks of the church. Around
73 Joshua Gardner’s photo from
Authenticated History of the Bell Witch
, M.V. Ingram, 1894.
316 P A T
F I T Z H U G H
1816, Sugg Fort became the Pastor of Red River
Baptist Church.
Over the years, mainly as a result of his father’s
having known the Bells in North Carolina before they
moved to Tennessee, Reverend Fort developed a good
friendship with John Bell and his family, often
visiting and holding prayer meetings in their home.
The same could not be said about Reverend Fort’s
older brother, Josiah, however.
At a church service in August of 1815, a deacon
was unable to distribute communion because John
Bell had privately expressed to him his
dissatisfaction with Josiah Fort. 74 Because both men
were at the table and prepared to partake of the
elements, the deacon refused to proceed because not
all present were in fellowship with one another.
Confusion arose among those prepared for
communion and several, including John Bell, got up
and went home.
The church conducted a private hearing some
weeks later to determine why “Brethren Bell & Fort
do not appear to be in fellowship.” 75 The outcome of
this hearing is not documented in the church
minutes; however, at the church’s next meeting,
Josiah Fort requested and received a letter of
dismission from the church and joined nearby
Drake’s Pond Baptist Church. He would eventually
return to Red River Baptist Church, but not until
after John Bell’s death.
Despite the issue of John Bell’s excommunication
from the church in 1818, Reverend Fort continued to
maintain the good relationship with Bell and his
family that they cultivated and enjoyed over the
years. Reverend Sugg Fort died in 1829, and is
74
Red River Baptist Church Minutes (1791-1826)
, pp. 165-166.
75
Red River Baptist Church Minutes (1791-1826)
, pp. 167-169.
THE BELL WITCH: THE FULL ACCOUNT
317
buried in one of the three Fort cemeteries in
Robertson County, Tennessee.
Reverend James R. Gunn (1772-1845)
It was Reverend James R. Gunn who asked Kate
the question, “Who are you and what do you want?”
in such a manner that a truthful answer was the
only option. Kate’s answer to his question, “I am
nothing but old Kate Batts’ witch, here to torment Ol’
Jack Bell to his death,” is what earned the Spirit the
nickname, “Kate.”
Reverend James Gunn was the younger of the two
Gunn brothers who pioneered Methodism in the Red
River area during the early Nineteenth Century. He
was born and spent his childhood in Virginia, where
he and his brother, Thomas, were licensed to preach
in May of 1789. He moved to Caswell County, North
Carolina in 1791.
The son of Episcopalians, Reverend James Gunn
was married twice and had a total of seventeen
children, three of who (Joseph, E.W., and William)
followed in his footsteps and became Methodist
ministers. He moved to Robertson County,
Tennessee in 1811, settling in the Red River area
near the Bell farm. He helped establish and then
began preaching at nearby Bethel Methodist Church,
which was in addition to riding the “circuit” and
preaching at other Methodist churches in Tennessee
and southern Kentucky. Along with his brother,
Thomas, Reverend James Gunn founded Ebenezer
Methodist Church (now known as Cedar Hill
Methodist Church) in 1833. Many of the churches
he helped to establish still exist today.
Reverend James R. Gunn died of a probable stroke
in 1849 after spending the last eight months of his
life confined to a bed.
318 P A T
F I T Z H U G H
Reverend Thomas Gunn (1770-1859)
Along with his brother, Reverend Thomas Gunn
pioneered Methodism in the Red River area during
the early Nineteenth Century. He was born and
spent his childhood in Virginia, where was licensed
to preach in May of 1789. 76 He moved to Caswell
County, North Carolina in 1791.
In the spring of 1812, Reverend Gunn moved to
the Red River area and settled in Logan County,
Kentucky where he remained four years before
moving to Robertson County, Tennessee. He
was
married twice, and three of his five children married
into the Bell family.
Despite having a dislocated hip from being thrown
by a horse in 1840, Reverend Thomas Gunn
continued preaching fervently in his trademark,
“hellfire and brimstone” manner – often traveling
long distances and suffering great pain to deliver the
word. Four years later, he was stricken with palsy
and suffered a serious head injury that rendered him