specimens of all wild plants and flowers in the area
and pressed them in a book,
listing both the Latin and
common name of each.
Vanderbilt University in
nearby Nashville learned of
Johnston’s book and asked
that it be donated because of
its stunning accuracy and
potential as a learning tool.
His descendants decided to
retain the book, and it is still
in their possession today.
Calvin Johnston’s interest in
horticulture is still evident
today, not only in the form of
his book, but also in the
flowers he planted many years ago. He loved
THE BELL WITCH: THE FULL ACCOUNT
325
buttercups and liberally planted them around the
site of his home and the grave of his nephew.
Although the buttercups around his home site are
long gone, the ones he planted on his nephew’s grave
still bloom each year. The variety
growing
on the
grave is very old and no longer obtainable, which
leads many to believe that these are the same
buttercups planted by Johnston many years ago.
The variety contains some green, but mostly “butter
and egg” colors.
Both Calvin and John Johnston were subscribers to
The Scientific American
, one of the earliest scientific
magazines to be published in this country, all the
way back to the early 1830’s. The family still has
some very early copies of the magazine, which
belonged to the Johnston brothers of long ago.
Calvin Johnston died in 1859, and is buried near
Adams, Tennessee. 82
His gravestone reads, “
Remember mortal man, as
you pass by. As you are now, so once was I. As I am
now, so you must be. Prepare for death and follow
me
.”
82 Correspondence with Mr. Jim Brooks, a direct descendant of the Johnston family.
326 P A T
F I T Z H U G H
Many of those who figured prominently into
the legend of the “Bell Witch” rest in this
cemetery located in rural Robertson County.
Those buried here include the Johnstons,
David and Parthenia “Theny Thorn” Gooch,
William Porter, and many others.
THE BELL WITCH: THE FULL ACCOUNT
327
Appendix B:
Richard Powell’s Petition to the
Tennessee State Legislature for
Financial Relief
31 October 1837
Petition Number 54-1837-01
To the Legislature of the State of Tennessee now
in session:
Your petitioner Richard R. P. Powell a citizen of
the County of Robertson and state aforesaid begs
leave humbly to state to your honorable body that
tho he has enjoyed the advantages of health and
body vigor and the helpings of prosperity, yet he is
now struggling against chill adversity. He would
further represent that by his own virtuous
industry and economy he so far succeeded in life
as to raise himself from the shades of poverty to
the sunshine of a reasonable affluence supporting
and rearing at the same time a wife and a
numerous offspring and flattered himself that he
had so far gained the advantages of the world that
he could close the evening of life in quiet and
ease. But at a moment when those fond
anticipations were freshest and fairest, promising
the fruition of all earthly happenings, the
destroyer came - that monsterful disease overtook
328 P A T
F I T Z H U G H
him - that blight and mildew came upon him. He
fell a victim to a paralysis of the right side of his
whole frame and while the physical man was
thrown from its lofty heights, the intellectual
throne was likewise sapped til altogether have
decayed and are crumbling.
Your petitioner thinks that his acquaintances and
countrymen will bear witness that he, when he
was himself, possessed some humble merit and
he is the more inclined to this belief from the
circumstances of the past testimonials beyond
that of words that he was repeatedly in his county
for years elected sheriff and also as their member
to the Legislative body, that responsible station
which you now fill.
Your humble petitioner will no further trouble you
with a preface but will come to the catastrophe.
Your petitioner fell not only a victim to disease but
likewise to his own unskillfullness and want of
judgment and the artifices of the cunning and
uncharitable. He is now desolate, disrobed of his
estate and left penniless with a wife and many
children dependent upon the poor effects of your
humble petitioner.
Your petitioner will endeavor not to fatigue you
with the details of his woes - suffice to say they
are not the offspring of crime but the calamity of
disease and affliction. Having thus addressed
myself to your charity and discretion allows your
humble petitioner to ask at your hands the
humble privilege of retailing such small quantities
of merchandise, as his limited circumstances
assisted by his wife may enable him through the
kindness of friends may procure free of taxation
that the small profit rising there from may be the
means of supporting the family of your humble
petitioner which he is desirous to rear up in a
THE BELL WITCH: THE FULL ACCOUNT
329
respectable circle of life. That could your
honorable body consistent with good feelings and
the constitution of the government make to your
humble petitioner some small donation to aid him
in a small commencement. Your petitioner having
some knowledge of merchandise. You would incur
all the good feelings of your humble petitioner and
family with a sincere hope that your charity will
ever be remembered by an all wise who is able to
add to the blessings of the charitable.
Your humble petitioner would trouble your
honorable body with short history of one of his
calamities that in order to enable him to
circumvent the embarrassments incurred in
consequence of this affliction he purchased a keel
boat and loaded the same with the most valuable
products of our country to the amount of $10,000
and had her launched at the landing at Clarksville
nearly ready to set sail to the southern market
where your petitioner had every
reason to believe
he would from the profits arising there from be
fully enabled to relieve himself from every
embarrassment and leave him in affluent
circumstances. But to the sad misfortune of your
petitioner, before he had set sail a steam boat
came along in the night time and ran afoul of the
boat of your petitioner and sunk her with his
loading which was destroyed and lost which
proved the destroyer of the remaining estate of
your humble petitioner to the amount of $6000.
The premises considered your humble petitioner
submits his case to the mercy of your honorable
body. 83
83 From Tennessee Legislative Records; provided electronically by Mr. Phillip C. Norfleet, webmaster of The Bell Witch Folklore Center, http://members.zoom.com/bellwitch001
330 P A T
F I T Z H U G H
Appendix C:
Biographical Sketch of Richard
Powell from the Tennessee
Legislative Encyclopedia
HOUSE, 20th General Assembly, 1833-35;
representing Robertson County. Born in Halifax
County, North Carolina, December 8, 1795; son of
Richard Rowell Ptolemy and Parthenia Powell;
grandson of John Powell. He was married (1st) on
December 7, 1815, to Esther Scott; no further
record of her. Powell removed to Robertson
County. Schoolmaster; was teacher to his second
wife. Married (2nd) on March 21, 1824, to
Elizabeth Bell (1806-1888), daughter of John and
Lucy (Williams) Bell, of Robertson County (with
whose family the “Bell Witch” legend is
concerned). Their children are variously identified
as Susan Amanda, Emily Caroline, Permelia
Adeline (Mrs. W. M. Gardner), Eliza Jane (Mrs.
Zadock R. Bell), DeWitt Williams, Virginia
Reynolds, Tennessee Bell, and Leftrick Reynolds
Powell. One source states that a son, Sam Powell,
was killed in the Civil War, but the reference is
probably to Reynolds Powell, who was killed
during the Civil War. Representative Powell was
sheriff of Robertson County, 1830-33; census
enumerator, justice of the peace, and captain in
the state militia, he died January 13, 1848, and is
THE BELL WITCH: THE FULL ACCOUNT
331
buried near Cedar Hill, Robertson County. His
widow was living with her two younger children in
Robertson County in 1850; she later removed to
Panola County, Mississippi; died near Water
Valley, Yalobusha County, on July 10, 1888;
buried near that place. Richard Powell was a
brother of Mathew Powell, sometime member
Tennessee General Assembly.
Sources:
Springfield Record
, March 1, 22, August 16, 1886;
Albert Virgil Goodpasture,
Goodspeed History of Tennessee -
Robertson County
, p. 837; M.V. Ingram,
Authenticated
History of the Bell Witch
; Charles Bailey Bell, M.D.,
The Bell
Witch - A Mysterious Spirit
;
Robertson County Deed Book 3
,
p. 150; Information furnished by Ralph L. Winters,
Historian – Clarksville, TN; Mrs. A. E. Clement, Nashville,
TN; and Mrs. Clyde Herring, great-granddaughter;
U.S.
Census
, 1830, 1850, Robertson County, TN; Hoffman,
Genealogical Abstracts of Wills -
1758-1824, Halifax County,
North Carolina
, pp. 70-71, 155. 84
84 From Tennessee Legislative Encyclopedia; provided electronically by Mr. Phillip C.
Norfleet, webmaster of The Bell Witch Folklore Center,
http://members.zoom.com/bellwitch001
332 P A T
F I T Z H U G H
Appendix D:
Early History of Robertson
County, Tennessee
T
HE EARLIEST INHABITANTS of Tennessee
that we know much about were the Mound
Builders. Archaeologists recognize two major
mound-building cultures – the Woodland and the
Mississippian.
The Mississippian culture came into existence
around 750 AD. Although most Mississippian
groups buried their dead in cemeteries, the
Woodland-type burial mounds were sometimes used.
At larger Mississippian settlements, the elite families
were sometimes buried in special mounds along with
their elaborate possessions that represented their
status in society. These burials took place from
about 1000 to 1500 AD, when the Mississippian
culture was at its peak.
The Mississippian culture was still flourishing
when early Spanish explorer Hernando de Soto
visited the area in the 1540-1541 period. By the
middle of the seventeenth century, mound building
had ceased and the Mound Builders (as we knew
them) became extinct. Other nations, such as the
Cherokee, Chickasaw, Creek and Choctaw, were
descended from the Mound Builders.
Most of Tennessee was hunting ground for these
groups many years before the white settlers arrived.
Most permanent Cherokee settlements were in
THE BELL WITCH: THE FULL ACCOUNT
333
eastern Tennessee near the Tennessee and Holston
Rivers. Permanent Chickasaw settlements were in
northern Mississippi and western Tennessee, the
Choctaws had permanent settlements in
northeastern Mississippi and southwestern
Tennessee, and the Creeks lived primarily in
Alabama. By 1776, most Native American tribes in
the area had decided to reclaim their land – now
occupied by white settlers.
The first known white settler in Robertson County
was Thomas Kilgore, who in 1778 built a fort on the
banks of the Red River near Cross Plains. It is
also believed that Ezekiel Polk, grandfather of
President James Knox Polk, settled on Sulphur Fork
Creek near the Red River about two years later;