Preserving Nashville’s Pioneer Legacy, Part II: The Role of John and Sally Buchanan in Nashville History

from the files of the Nashville Historical Newsletter.

This account was written by Mike Slate in 2011 as part of his campaign to save Buchanan’s Station Cemetery from being lost in a flurry of industrial development.

Early map of the Cumberland River (Library of Congress, https://www.loc.gov/item/2013591467)

John Buchanan (1759-1832) and his group of settlers arrived at the French Lick (future Nashville, Tennessee) in the winter of 1779-80. In his book Tennessee during the Revolutionary War, historian Samuel Cole Williams states that “Some South Carolinians on the move to the West overtook the Robertson party; and, being smaller in number and less encumbered, reached French Lick first, crossed the Cumberland on ice, and began the building of cabins. The South Carolinians included John Buchanan and his brother, Alexander; Daniel and Sampson Williams, brothers; James and John Mulherrin, and Thomas Thompson.” If this account is accurate, John Buchanan was one of the very first pioneers to call Nashville home. Today John (often called “Major John”) lies buried at the Buchanan’s Station Cemetery.

John Buchanan was the son of John Buchanan Sr., one of Nashville’s first heroes. In the April 2, 1781,Battle of the Bluffs” near Fort Nashborough, John Sr. famously saved Edward Swanson from being killed by a Native American attacker, but Buchanan lost his son Alexander during this battle. Several years later John Sr. was himself murdered at Buchanan’s Station by Indians; an account of this event is preserved by George W. Featherstonhaugh in his Excursion through the Slave States. Samuel Buchanan, another brother of Major John, was also killed by Indians at the station. For an evocative account of Samuel’s death see the article, “The Buchanans of Buchanan’s Station” in the Chicago Magazine, Vol. 1 No. 3, 1857. Buchanan Sr., his wife Jane, and their son Samuel are likely buried in the Buchanan’s Station Cemetery in unmarked graves. Though he lost his father and two brothers to Indian warfare, Major John, unlike many others who attempted to settle in Nashville but moved on, persevered here for the remainder of his life.

John Buchanan’s Book of Arithmetic (courtesy of the Tennessee State Library and Archives)

John Buchanan wrote Nashville’s first book. Apparently in a systematic effort to learn the mathematics of land surveying, Major John created John Buchanan’s Book of Arithmetic, and dated it June 20, 1781. He did indeed pursue land surveying, and his name is listed on many early Nashville surveys. In the course of his public career, Buchanan himself amassed many hundreds of acres, becoming quite prosperous. Today, Buchanan’s book is a Nashville and Tennessee artifact that is carefully preserved in the Tennessee State Library and Archives. Ironically, Tennessee has treasured the book but not the grave of the man who produced it.

After living approximately four years at Fort Nashborough, Buchanan and his family moved a few miles east and established Buchanan’s Station on Mill Creek, near today’s Elm Hill Pike and Massman Drive. In addition to a stockaded fort with blockhouses, Major John built a grist mill, and some authorities believe his mill is the one that gave Mill Creek its name. In about 1786 John married Margaret Kennedy, who died after giving birth to their first and only child, John Buchanan II (technically John III), born on May 15, 1787. Little is known about Margaret, who may be buried in an unmarked grave at the Buchanan’s Station Cemetery. Descendants of John Buchanan II include Tennessee Governor John Price Buchanan, Nobel Prize winner James M. Buchanan, and Nashville attorney Alexander Buchanan.

John Buchanan was the commander of the fort on the fateful night of September 30, 1792, when several hundred Indians attacked it as part of a grand plan to destroy the Cumberland settlements. In this “Battle of Buchanan’s Station,” roughly 20 riflemen in the station repulsed the horde, killing several Indian leaders, without the loss of a single settler. Historian J.G.M. Ramsey called the victory “a feat of bravery which has scarcely been surpassed in all the annals of border warfare.” James Phelan offered a similar assessment: “This is one of the most remarkable incidents in the early border warfare of the Southwest. So wonderful, indeed, that even some of the pioneers believed in the direct interposition of Providence.” Not surprisingly, the story of the Battle has been recounted in many volumes of history, including Theodore Roosevelt’s The Winning of the West.

Frontier wedding (photo courtesy of Living History farms)

Perhaps the wisest decision John Buchanan ever made was to marry Sarah “Sally” Ridley (1773-1831). Sally was one of the first white females born in what would eventually become the state of Tennessee. Along with her father, Revolutionary War veteran Captain George Ridley, she arrived in the Cumberland settlements about 1790. Her family established Ridley’s Station in the area of today’s Nolensville Road and Glenrose Avenue. Sally, a large woman with a large personality, was destined to become a legend in much of the eastern half of the United States.

Throughout the Battle of Buchanan’s Station, Sally, nine months pregnant with the couple’s first child, was the heroic voice of victory. She encouraged the riflemen at every turn, molded bullets when the supply ran low (reportedly by melting her dinnerware), blocked another woman in the station from surrendering herself and her children to almost certain death, and helped fool the Indians by a “showing of hats.” Sally’s uncommon spunk was extolled by biographer Elizabeth Ellet in her 1856 volume, The Women of the American Revolution, which referred to her as “the greatest heroine of the West.” Periodicals from as far away as Boston immortalized Sarah, some fancifully, and she was listed in at least two national encyclopedias of biography (Appleton’s and Herringshaw’s).

John and Sarah Buchanan had thirteen children: George, Alexander, Elizabeth, Samuel, William, Jane T., James B., Moses R., Sarah V., Charles B., Richard G., Henry R., and Nancy M. The Buchanan children and grandchildren intermarried with members of other settlements around Buchanan’s Station, their families becoming important not only to Davidson County history but also to that of neighboring Rutherford and Williamson counties. Eventually the Buchanan descendants spread to all parts of the United States, and accounts of their accomplishments and contributions to the nation could fill volumes.

A reenactor portraying Cherokee Chief John Watts shares historical information with visitors to the Buchanan’s Station Cemetery, 2012.

Buchanan’s Station also has significant associations with local Native American history. It was a confederacy of Creeks, Cherokees, and Shawnees that attacked the Station in 1792. During the battle, Chiachattalla (also known as Kiachatalee, Tsiagatali, Kittegiska, and Tom Tunbridge’s son), an especially dauntless warrior, was shot near the fort. As he lay dying, he reportedly continued his efforts to set the structure ablaze by fanning the flames with his last breaths. Also killed in the battle were “the Shawnee Warrior” (Cheeseekau, a brother of the great Tecumseh) and White Owl’s Son, brother of Dragging Canoe. The great Chickamauga chief John Watts was shot through both thighs but was removed from the battleground in a litter and later recovered. For a partial list of Indian casualties at the Battle of Buchanan’s Station see American State Papers: Indian Affairs 4-331.

Today John and Sarah Buchanan are almost forgotten. Very few citizens know that their graves, with the original headstones, survive in Buchanan’s Station Cemetery, the last vestige of the pioneer settlement. The educational and inspirational lessons of their lives have been largely squandered, and the story of the Battle of Buchanan’s Station has been all but lost. Believing that the Buchanans are an integral part of early Nashville history – see the first chapter in Harriette Simpson Arnow’s Flowering of the Cumberland – a number of concerned Nashville-area citizens have formed the Friends of the Buchanan’s Station Cemetery, with the goals of remedying years of neglect of this historic site and of restoring one of Nashville’s founding families to its proper place in our historical consciousness. (2011)

John and Sally Buchanan’s gravestones in Buchanan’s Station Cemetery

Daniel Williams Jr.  (1755 – ca. 1823)

by Kathy B. Lauder.

Daniel Williams Jr., first sheriff of Davidson County, was born December 11, 1755, the fourth of thirteen children of Daniel and Hannah Echols Williams.  Many sources fail to distinguish between the two Daniels, father and son: fellow settler Robert Weakley wrote, “Daniel Williams was originally from Virginia but went to South Carolina before the Revolution. There the Tories shot down two of his sons, in cold blood, at their father’s house.”1 This is a clear reference to Daniel Sr., since Daniel Jr. was 20 years old and unmarried when the American Revolution began, but their identities are not always so obligingly unambiguous.  Both Daniels are documented as residing in Middle Tennessee, serving on juries, supervising road construction, and participating in civic activities.

Daniel Williams Jr., along with his brother Sampson, John Buchanan and his brother Alexander, James and John Mulherrin, and others, arrived in the Cumberland region in 1779.2  They had left their families at Clark’s Station, near Danville, Kentucky, “in comparative safety”3 and traveled ahead to establish a settlement. They faced frequent Indian attacks, and several members of the party were injured or killed.

Although Daniel Williams Jr. was the first sheriff of Davidson County, he was not the first sheriff of the district. The colonists had established the Cumberland Court on January 7, 1783, as a regional government to oversee the new settlement. The Court elected John Montgomery district sheriff in January4 and swore him in on February 5, 1783,5  but he was soon replaced by Thomas Fletcher as “Sworn Sheriff of ye Destrict of Cumberland.”6  The hapless Montgomery (almost certainly not the same man as Clarksville’s founder, Col. John Montgomery) appeared in court in January 1784, accused of “Treasonable proceedings on the Mississippi Against the Spaniards.”7 While acquitted of these charges, when Montgomery failed to appear to face subsequent civil allegations, the court seized his property.8

Davidson County, the oldest county in Middle Tennessee, was established by an act of the North Carolina legislature in April 1783 and named for General William Lee Davidson, who had died fighting Cornwallis in the Revolutionary War. At the first session of the Davidson County court, which met October 6, 1783, the justices elected Daniel Williams to a two-year term as sheriff and ordered construction of the first county courthouse and jail.9 The sheriff, paid on a fee basis, made a comfortable living: he received 8 shillings for each arrest and slightly smaller amounts for placing someone in the stocks, collecting bad debts, carrying out whippings and brandings, and so forth.10

According to Col. T. H. Williams, writing to Lyman Draper about 1843, four Williams brothers served as Davidson County Sheriff: Daniel (1755-1823), Sampson (1763-1841), Oliver (1768-1831), and Wright Williams (1776-1815). 11 A list on the website of the Davidson County Sheriff’s Department does not include Oliver Williams, but it does name Daniel Williams (elected 1783), Sampson Williams, who served two terms (1789 and 1791-1794), and Wright Williams (1799).12

Daniel Williams Jr. died in Wilkinson County, Mississippi. Sources vary as to his date of death.  (2014)


Sources:

[Note: Many of the period sources quoted in this paper may be found in Paul Clements’ invaluable book, Chronicles of the Cumberland Settlements, 1779-1796. (Nashville: Self-published, 2012) References to all such quotes include not only the original published source (Draper, Haywood, Weakley, etc.), but also the page number where that and additional source material may be found in Clements’ book.]

1 Letter from Robert Weakley to Lyman Draper: Draper Papers, 32S, 519-520 (Clements 150).  

2 Haywood, John. Civil and Political History of the State of Tennessee from its earliest settlement up to the Year 1796. New York: Arno Press, 1971 [ca. 1823].

3 Arnow, Harriette Simpson. Seedtime on the Cumberland. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1960, 218.

4 “Minutes of Cumberland Court,” January 7, 1783. Three Pioneer Tennessee Documents. Nashville: Tennessee Historical Commission, 1964, 23.

5 “Minutes of Cumberland Court,” February 5, 1783, 25.

6 “Minutes of Cumberland Court,” March 15, 1783, 29.

7 Wells, Carol. Davidson County, Tennessee, Court Minutes, 1783-1792. Bowie, Maryland: Heritage Books, Inc., 1990, 1-2.8 Wells, 6.

9 Ewing, Andrew, clerk (1783). Davidson County Court Daily Minutes, Vol. A:3. Mf. No 1597. Register’s Office, Davidson County Court House, Nashville, Tennessee. (Clements 199-200)

10 Arnow, 316, note.     

11 Williams, Colonel T. H. Williams Family Notes, ca. 1843. Draper Papers, 5XX: 14 (Clements 510).

12 Davidson County, Tennessee, Sheriff’s Department. “Our History: List of Davidson County Sheriffs.”      http://www.nashville.gov/Sheriffs-Office/About-Us/Our-History/Davidson-County-Sheriffs.aspx  (accessed March 26, 2015)


SUGGESTED READING:

Arnow, Harriette Simpson. Seedtime on the Cumberland. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1960.

Clements, Paul. Chronicles of the Cumberland Settlements, 1779-1796. Nashville: Clements, self-published, 2012.

Haywood, John. Civil and Political History of the State of Tennessee from its earliest settlement up to the year 1796. New York: Arno Press, 1971 [ca. 1823].

Buchanan’s Station: The Battle That Saved the Cumberland Settlements

by Mike Slate.

Probably recounted more often than any other Indian attack in Tennessee history1, the heroic Battle of Buchanan’s Station occurred on the moonlit night of September 30, 1792. A confederacy of about 300 Creeks, Chickamauga Cherokees, and Shawnee2 surrounded Major John Buchanan’s Mill Creek stockade, intending to destroy it before advancing on Nashville and the other Cumberland settlements. A mere fifteen sharpshooters3 within the station turned back the onslaught by killing or wounding several notable Indian leaders without losing a single defender. Historian J.G.M. Ramsey called the victory “a feat of bravery which has scarcely been surpassed in all the annals of border warfare.”4

Informants Richard Finnelson and Joseph Deraque had warned the Cumberland settlers of the impending attack.5 In Knoxville territorial governor William Blount was similarly alerted by friendly Indians. Blount ordered Nashville’s James Robertson to raise militia and prepare, but he sent orders to stand down after no attack materialized. Robertson, more skeptical, remained vigilant and sent out scouts to hunt for marauders. Two of the scouts, Jonathan Gee and Seward Clayton, never returned and were later discovered to have been killed.6

Following a war conference that fueled their longstanding outrage over colonial encroachment, the Indians, armed by the Spanish government, began their campaign in Chickamauga country near today’s Chattanooga. As they approached Nashville, they quarreled about whether to attack Buchanan’s Station first. This decision set the stage for the ensuing drama.7

On guard at Buchanan’s Station, John McCrory heard the Indians approaching and fired the first shot of the battle, instantly killing Shawnee Warrior.8 The Indians fired volley after volley at the blockhouse as the little garrison inside struggled against overwhelming odds. Sarah “Sally” Ridley Buchanan, Major Buchanan’s hugely pregnant wife, became the voice of victory. Aided by other women, she reportedly molded and carried additional ammunition to the riflemen, supplied them with distilled spirits, insisted that they make every shot count, and cheered them on. For her courageous acts that night, she would become known as “the greatest heroine of the West.”9

Reenactors in a 2012 event at Buchanan’s Station cemetery portray Maj. John Buchanan, Sally Buchanan, and a wilderness preacher.

The Indians also demonstrated great courage. Cherokee warrior Kiachatallee (also Chiachattalla) attempted to set the fort ablaze. Although mortally injured, he continued to kindle flames with his dying breath.10 Among other braves who died that Sunday night was White Owl’s Son, possibly the brother of Dragging Canoe.11 John Watts, recently chosen chief of the Lower Cherokees (Chickamaugas), was severely wounded but later recovered.

The battle finally ended, perhaps because of the ineptitude of an inebriated Irishman in the station. Not realizing he had overloaded the Buchanans’ old blunderbuss, Jimmy O’Connor produced a stupendous boom.12 The Indians, terrified of cannon fire, withdrew.

The Battle of Buchanan’s Station has captured the attention of historians since 1792. British scholar Dr. John Sugden recently determined that the Shawnee Warrior killed by John McCrory was Cheeseekau, Tecumseh’s brother and mentor. Moreover, Sugden writes, Tecumseh himself was present at the battle and watched his brother die.13 Such valuable ongoing research will continue to deepen our understanding of this critical frontier event.  (2014)

Portrait of Major John Buchanan (TN State Museum)

1 Although such matters are difficult to quantify, I know of no single conflict between colonial settlers and Native Americans in Tennessee history, not even Nashville’s “Battle of the Bluff,” that has appeared in print as often as the Battle of Buchanan’s Station (BoBS). Accounts of the BoBS are many, varied, and sometimes conflicting. Tracing and analyzing these accounts chronologically, from 1792 until the present, is a fascinating historiographical journey. The “baseline” account is a 388-word report from James Robertson to territorial governor William Blount, which arrived to Blount on October 9, 1792. That correspondence can be found in American State Papers: Indian Affairs 1: 294-295. Skipping over many other accounts to the present, three excellent modern treatments of the battle are John Buchanan [a coincidental name], Jackson’s Way: Andrew Jackson and the People of the Western Waters (Hoboken NJ: John Wiley & Sons, 2001, reprint by Castle Books), 131-136; John Sugden, Tecumseh: A Life (New York: Henry Holt and Company, paperback reprint, 1997), 70-75; and John Anthony Caruso, The Appalachian Frontier: America’s First Surge Westward (Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 2003, new edition of the 1959 original), 353-357.

2 The number of Indians said to have surrounded Buchanan’s Station varies from 280 to 900 or more. Robertson’s original account (in the American State Papers) says, “supposed to consist of three or four hundred.” However, a report from Blount on November 5, 1792, says, “appeared to have been, Creeks, from 400 to 500; Cherokees, 200; Shawanese, from 30-40” (See American State Papers: Indian Affairs 1: 331). The Tennessee state historical marker on the battle site says “about 300,” and most modern treatments also report “about 300.” I have chosen to use the conservative “about 300” figure.

3 The exact number of defenders, like that of the attackers, is uncertain. Robertson’s original account clearly says “fifteen gun-men,” and that is the number used by some later accounts and most modern ones. Yet it appears possible if not likely that Robertson’s report was not precisely accurate. Over the ensuing years the number increased to about twenty. A few accounts attempt to name the defenders, and a researcher can combine those accounts and arrive at well over twenty. Those accounts which attempt to name the defenders include the following: John Buchanan Todd, letter to Lyman Draper, 9 November 1854, Draper Manuscripts 6XX64; Major Thomas Washington, “The Attack on Buchanan’s Station,” Annals of the Army of Tennessee and Early Western History, Vol. 1 November (1878): 378-381; Josephus Conn Guild, Old Times in Tennessee (Knoxville: Tenase Company, 1971, reprint of the 1878 original), 300-313; Thomas Buchanan, “Buchanan Memoir,” at https://sites.google.com/site/davidsoncounty/home/people-of-interest/buchanan-history, accessed 01-25-14; and Edward Albright, Early History of Middle Tennessee (Nashville: Brandon Printing Company, 1909), 171-177. It appears that some of the pioneers named were indeed involved in the larger context of the battle but not in the actual conflict itself. I have chosen to use Robertson’s conservative “fifteen gun-men” figure.

4 J.G.M. Ramsey, The Annals of Tennessee to the End of the Eighteenth Century (Johnson City TN: The Overmountain Press, 1999 reprint of the 1853 original), 566-567.

5 For more on Finnelson and Deraque see American State Papers: Indian Affairs 1: 288-292.

6 Robertson’s original account (in the American State Papers) reports of Gee and Clayton that “it is supposed they are killed.” Later accounts substantiate this and describe the circumstances of their deaths. Little is known about Jonathan Gee. Ironically, Seward Clayton was captured by Indians when he was a boy, in an incident that involved Major John Buchanan. For that story see Lizzie P. Elliott, Early History of Nashville (Nashville: The Board of Education, 1911), 155-158. The Indians later released Clayton, who then met his death by their hands in 1792.

7 The events and circumstances leading up to the Battle of Buchanan’s Station are substantially covered by the three modern accounts listed in note #1 above. The BoBS was the climax of a much larger story that is instructive as to the political climate of the time as well as to the complicated relationships between Native Americans and Euro-American settlers.

8 “John Mc. Rory” is the only active defender that Robertson mentions by name in his original account. The specific fact that McCrory killed Shawnee Warrior is not stated by Robertson, but is taken from later accounts. Additionally, some later accounts mention Thomas McCrory rather than John. An example of such accounts is the “literary” (complete with dialogue, etc.) story by Octavia Zollicoffer Bond, Old Tells Retold (Nashville: Smith & Lamar, 1906), 154-167.

9 Elizabeth F. Ellet, The Women of the American Revolution, Vol. III (New York: Charles Scribner, 1856), 310-327. Ellet wrote an entire chapter featuring Sarah Buchanan. Concerning the designation, “the greatest heroine of the West,” Ellet’s exact words were: “The fame of this gallant defence [during the BoBS] went abroad, and the young wife of Major Buchanan was celebrated as the greatest heroine of the West.” Also see Wilson and Fiske, eds., Appleton’s Cyclopaedia of American Biography, Vol. 1 (New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1888), 436-437, in which Sarah is again called “the greatest heroine of the west.”

10 The events of the death of Kiachatalle (also known as “Tom Tunbridge’s step-son”) must have been quite dramatic. Robertson’s report says that he “ascended the roof with a torch, where he was shot, and, falling to the ground, renewed his attempts to fire the bottom logs, and was killed.” Kiachatalle’s body was identified the next morning by Joseph Brown, who knew him well from his captivity by the Indians a few years before the BoBS.

11 White Owl’s Son seems to be sometimes known as “Little Owl,” who was indeed Dragging Canoe’s brother. A Creek chief (perhaps Talotiskee) was also killed at the battle, and Unacate was injured or killed. See American State Papers: Indian Affairs 1: 331. One or two other accounts report that as many as thirty Indians were killed that night. More research needs to be done about the Indians who participated in the BoBS.

12 The priceless story of Jimmy O’Connor’s fortunate misuse of the blunderbuss has been told over and over again. Some accounts, however, say that it was the boom of the little swivel cannon at Fort Nashborough that so frightened the Indians. I am partial to John Buchanan Todd’s clever statement (in Draper, 6XX64) that, “Jemmy O’Connor blundering with his blunderbuss in all probability saved the station.”

13 It would be difficult to overestimate the importance and influence of Sugden’s determination that Cheeseekau (sometimes called “Chiksika”) died at Buchanan’s Station in the presence of his brother, the iconic Tecumseh. Fortunately, Sugden provides his well-reasoned analysis of the sources related to this matter in Sugden, 421-422 n. 1. Many scholars and Internet sources have accepted Sugden’s discovery as fact, which has placed Buchanan’s Station on the radar of many additional historians.


FUNDAMENTAL SOURCES

American State Papers: Indian Affairs 1: 294-295.

Arnow, Harriette Simpson. Flowering of the Cumberland. Lincoln, University of Nebraska Press, 1996 edition of the 1963 original.

Buchanan, John. Jackson’s Way: Andrew Jackson and the People of the Western Waters. Hoboken NJ, John Wiley & Sons, 2001, reprint by Castle Books.

Caruso, John Anthony. The Appalachian Frontier: America’s First Surge Westward. Knoxville, University of Tennessee Press, 2003, new edition of the 1959 original.

Clements, Paul. Chronicles of the Cumberland Settlements. Nashville, self-published, 2012.

Ramsey, J.G.M. The Annals of Tennessee to the End of the Eighteenth Century. Johnson City TN, The Overmountain Press, 1999 reprint of the 1853 original.

Sugden, John. Tecumseh: A Life. New York, Henry Holt and Company, 1997, paperback reprint.


ADDENDUM

James Robertson’s original account of the Battle of Buchanan’s Station as found in American State Papers: Indian Affairs 1: 294-295:

“On the 30th September, about midnight, John Buchanan’s Station, four miles south of Nashville, (at which sundry families had collected, and fifteen gun-men) was attacked by a party of Creeks and Lower Cherokees, supposed to consist of three or four hundred. Their approach was suspected by the running of cattle, that had taken fright at them, and, upon examination, they were found rapidly advancing within ten yards of the gate; from this place and distance they received the first fire from the man who discovered them, (John Mc. Rory.) They immediately returned the fire, and continued a very heavy and constant firing upon the station, (blockhouses, surrounded with a stockade) for an hour, and were repulsed with considerable loss, without injuring man, woman, or child, in the station.

“During the whole time of attack, the Indians were not more distant than ten yards from the blockhouse, and often in large numbers round the lower walls, attempting to put fire to it. One ascended the roof with a torch, where he was shot, and, falling to the ground, renewed his attempts to fire the bottom logs, and was killed. The Indians fired 30 balls through a port-hole of the overjutting, which lodged in the roof in the circumference of a hat, and those sticking in the walls, on the outside, were very numerous.

“Upon viewing the ground next morning, it appeared that the fellow who was shot from the roof, was a Cherokee half-breed of the Running Water, known by the whites by the name of Tom Tunbridge’s step-son, the son of a French woman, by an Indian, and there was much blood, and signs that many dead had been dragged off, and litters having been made to carry their wounded to their horses, which they had left a mile from the station. Near the blockhouse were found several swords, hatchets, pipes, kettles, and budgets of different Indian articles; one of the swords was a fine Spanish blade, and richly mounted in the Spanish fashion. In the morning previous to the attack, Jonathan Gee, and — Clayton were sent out as spies, and on the ground, among other articles left by the Indians, were found a handkerchief and a moccason [sic], known one to belong to Gee, and the other to Clayton, hence it is supposed they are killed.”

Author Index to Newsletter Entries

OUR STORY: Who We Are

BAKER, CARTER G.

. . . . . 1930: Caldwell & Co. Fails

. . . . . A Lovely Sunday for the Cemetery

. . . . . Nashville Memories: The Man Who Shot Buses

. . . . . Nashville Memories: The Rich Man’s Wife

. . . . . Nashville Memories: Take Me Out to the Ball Park

. . . . . Nashville Memories: The Worried Wife

. . . . . Two Brothers-in-Law at City Cemetery

BAKER, TERRY

. . . . . Out of the Ashes of Defeat: The Story of Confederate POW Edward L. Buford (1842-1928)

. . . . . A Place in History: Nashville’s Historic Elliston Place

. . . . . “Strength and Beauty”: Buford College of Nashville, 1901-1920

. . . . . Their Dust Dispersed on Many Fields: The Confederate Circle at Mount Olivet

. . . . . “With the Sun behind Him”: Captain Edward Buford Jr., Nashville’s World War I “Ace”

BOCKMAN, GUY ALAN

. . . . . Four Recent Answers from Two Old Documents

. . . . . Ghostly Tracks of the Tennessee and Pacific Railroad

. . . . . Six Triple Threat Town Sites

BOYCE, DORIS

. . . . . The Battle of Nashville: Shy, Smith, and Hood

. . . . . From Knickers to Body Stockings

. . . . . Luke Lea: A Biographical Sketch

. . . . . Luke Lea in the Great Depression

. . . . . Luke Lea in the Great War

. . . . . Remembering Omohundro

. . . . . A Woman Challenged: The Life of Granny White

. . . . . Woodlawn Memorial Park

CENTER, LINDA

. . . . . Chancery Court, the Adelphi, and Adolphus Heiman

. . . . . John Crowe Ransom: Young Prophet to Poet

CHASTINE, KEVIN

. . . . . S. H. Kress in Nashville: An Art Deco Parthenon?

CIVIL RIGHTS TIMELINE 1624-2012

. . . . . Part One: 1624-1947

. . . . . Part Two: 1947-1956

. . . . . Part Three: 1957-1960

. . . . . Part Four: 1961-1965

. . . . . Part Five: 1966-2012

CONNELLY, JOHN LAWRENCE

. . . . . The Rebirth of Germantown

CORNWELL, ILENE JONES

. . . . . Angels in the Midst of Richland’s Rampage

. . . . . Big Harpeth River

. . . . . From Farm to Factory

. . . . . The Robertson Monument: From Exposition Capstone to Centennial Park Monolith

COURSEY, JOHN

. . . . . Nashville Movie Theaters

COX, DEBIE OESER

. . . . . Courthouses of Davidson County, Tennessee

. . . . . Jonathan Jennings’ Will

. . . . . Nashville’s City Hotel

. . . . . No Lighted “Segars”: Rules for Nashville’s First Bridge

EDWARDS, AMELIA WHITSITT

. . . . . Clover Bottom Beach

. . . . . Governor A. H. Roberts and His Donelson Farm

. . . . . Pioneer History of Stone’s River near the Clover Bottoms

ELLIS, LARRY MICHAEL

. . . . . 1814 Nashville Fire

. . . . . Robert “Black Bob” Renfro: From Slave to Entrepreneur

FIETH, KENNETH

. . . . . The Army Air Forces Classification Center

. . . . . Nikita Krushchev and Hillsboro High School

. . . . . The USS Tennessee at Pearl Harbor

. . . . . “Washed and Dryed after Being Executed”: Historical Humor from the Metro Archives

FLEMING, PEGGY DICKINSON

. . . . . Jacob McGavock Dickinson Sr.

. . . . . Memories of Cornelia Fort

FORD, GALE WILKES

. . . . . The Hodge House in Percy Warner Park

FORKUM, ALLEN

. . . . . The Powder Magazine Explosion (1847)

. . . . . The Suspension Bridge (1850)

FORKUM, ALLEN, and E. THOMAS WOOD

. . . . . The Zollicoffer-Marling Duel (1852)

GILMER, AMBER BARFIELD

. . . . . Arranging the Light: The Story of Calvert Photography

GLEAVES, EDWIN S.

. . . . . Cohn High School 50th Reunion, Class of 1954: Remembrances of Things Past

. . . . . Outstanding 20th Century Tennesseans

GUILLAUM, TED

. . . . . A Mortal Shooting in the Tennessee State Capitol

GULLEY, FRANK

. . . . . Vanderbilt University and Southern Methodism

HELT, NANCY

. . . . . A History of the Buchanan Log House

HILLENMEYER, MARIANNE

. . . . . The Gilding of Nashville’s Athena Parthenos

HOOBLER, JAMES A.

. . . . . Sally Thomas (1787-1850)

HUGGINS, GLORIA NEWSOM

. . . . . Alice Thompson Collinsworth: Intrepid Pioneer

JOHNSON, JEANNE M.

. . . . . Biography of Charles Henry Ryman

KAPLAN, CAROL

. . . . . Andrew Jackson Pageot

. . . . . Consumption: The Taker of Young Lives

. . . . . James Thomas Callender

. . . . . Remembering Nashville’s Daughters

. . . . . ‘Til Death Do Us Part: Love and Devotion at City Cemetery

. . . . . To Live in Hearts We Leave Behind Is Not to Die

. . . . . The True History of the “Ivy Rock”

. . . . . Whatever the Cost to Ourselves: Nashville Women’s Civil War

. . . . . Women to the Rescue

LANCASTER, JOHN S.

. . . . . Adolphus Heiman’s Cemetery Stonework

LASKA, LEWIS L.

. . . . . A History of African-American Lawyers in Nashville

. . . . . An Incident in Post-Civil-War Nashville: Champ Ferguson and the Hefferman Killers

. . . . . Public Executions in Nashville

LAUDER, KATHY

. . . . . The 1933 Nashville Tornado

. . . . . Banquet at the Duncan

. . . . . Buchanan’s Station – 1869 article

. . . . . Chapter 130: Tennessee’s First Jim Crow Law   

. . . . . Daniel Smith, Frontier Surveyor (1748-1818)

. . . . . Daniel Williams

. . . . . The Duelists: Jackson and Dickinson

. . . . . Elbridge Gerry Eastman, 1813-1859

. . . . . Frank Goodman, 1854-1910

. . . . . From Curiosity to Hope: The Work of Local Historians

. . . . . Funeral Customs of the 1800s

. . . . . George Woods, 1842-1912

. . . . . Jacob McGavock Dickinson: Jurist and Statesman

. . . . . A History of the Buchanan Log House

. . . . . John Berrien Lindsley, 1822-1897

. . . . . Life and Death in the 19th Century

. . . . . Lost Nashville: The Second Presbyterian Church

. . . . . Louise G. Lindsley, 1858-1944

. . . . . Marcus B. Toney, 1840-1929

. . . . . Meet Nashville’s Leaders

. . . . . Nashville Coaches Who Made a Difference

. . . . . Nashville-Tuskegee Connections, Part I: Medicine, Music, & Architecture

. . . . . Nashville-Tuskegee Connections, Part II: The Tuskegee Airmen

. . . . . Nashvillians Who Stood behind the Sit-ins: Part I. The Trainers & the Partners

. . . . . Nashvillians Who Stood behind the Sit-ins: Part II. The Attorneys

. . . . . Nashvillians Who Stood behind the Sit-ins: Part III. The Quiet Allies

. . . . . A “New” Image of General James Robertson?

. . . . . Philip Lindsley, 1786-1855

. . . . . Sarah “Sallie” McGavock Lindsley, 1830-1903

. . . . . Sampson W. Keeble, 1833-1887

. . . . . Samuel A. McElwee, 1859-1914

. . . . . Thomas A. Sykes, 1838-ca. 1905

. . . . . TSLA–Tennessee’s Treasurehouse

. . . . . Walker, Taylor, and Carr: The Men behind Nashville’s African American Parks and Cemeteries

. . . . . With All Deliberate Speed

LAUDER, KATHY B., and JOHN MARSHALL

. . . . . Monroe W. Gooden: Ahead of His Time

. . . . . Slave to Statesman: The Story of John W. Boyd

LISTS

. . . . . Nashville Movie Theaters

. . . . . Outstanding 20th Century Tennesseans

. . . . . Twenty Oldest Nashville Businesses (1997)

LOPER, SUE

. . . . . Civil Rights and the Nashville Room

MACDONALD, GORDON

. . . . . Letter from Mary

MARSHALL, JOHN W., and KATHY B. LAUDER

. . . . . Monroe W. Gooden: Ahead of His Time

. . . . . Slave to Statesman: The Story of John W. Boyd

McCLANAHAN, LARRY D.

. . . . . Sulphur Dell, the “Goat Man,” the Roxy, and Other Nashville Memories

McCONNELL, GEORGIANA T.

. . . . . A Chronology of Nashville Airports

MEADOR, BONNIE ROSS

. . . . . The Quest for Joshua Burnett Ross

MEESE, JILL FARRINGER

. . . . . Dr. Felix Randolph Robertson (1781-1865)

“MUSINGS” BY MIKE SLATE

. . . . . Aesop and the Wedding of Human and Natural History

. . . . . Airdrie: Let There Be Paradise

. . . . . At the Stone-Stoner Confluence

. . . . . An Eerie Street, an Ancient Creek, an Old Log House    

. . . . . How Nashville Dishonored a President and Altered American History

. . . . . Perilous Times in Nashville      

. . . . . The Trail of Tears through Nashville

NASHVILLE HISTORICAL NEWSLETTER

. . . . . Preserving Nashville’s Pioneer Legacy, Part I: Paving over Our Past

. . . . . Preserving Nashville’s Pioneer Legacy, Part II: The Role of John and Sally Buchanan in Nashville History

. . . . . Preserving Nashville’s Pioneer Legacy, Part III: Saving Buchanan’s Station Cemetery

NEIL, RICHARD R.

. . . . . The Historic Mud Tavern Community

NOLAN, PAT

. . . . . Tennessee Politics 2002: An Historic Year of Change

NORTON, C. MICHAEL

. . . . . The Stieglitz Collection at Fisk University

. . . . . Theodore Roosevelt’s 1907 Nashville Visit

PHILLIPS, PAUL

. . . . . A Summary History of the Belmont Church

PRICE, DAVE

. . . . . The Centennial Circus Lot

. . . . . The Nashville Theaters of 1900

. . . . . The Old Nashville Market House, 1828-1937

. . . . . The Southern Post Card Magazine

. . . . . Thuss, Koellein, and Giers

PRIMARY SOURCE DOCUMENTS, transcribed

. . . . . 1797 Vermin Law

. . . . . 1814 Nashville Fire

. . . . . Banquet at the Duncan

. . . . . Battle of Buchanan’s Station

. . . . . Buchanan’s Station – 1869 article

. . . . . Jonathan Jennings’ Will

. . . . . Letter from Mary

. . . . . No Lighted Segars: Rules for Nashville’s First Bridge

. . . . . The Peabody Student Protest of 1883

. . . . . A Souvenir from the 1920s

. . . . . The USS Tennessee at Pearl Harbor

. . . . . William Driver’s Flag

RICHARDSON, DALE

. . . . . The Move to Nashville

RICHARDSON, DEWEY

. . . . . The Move to Nashville

ROSEMAN, JEAN

. . . . . Lee Loventhal: Citizen Exemplar

. . . . . Reverend Charles Spencer Smith (1852-1922)

SEAT, HOUSTON

. . . . . My Hermitage Experience

SKIPPER, JACK ANDREW

. . . . . General James Robertson, Frontier Surgeon   

SLATE, BILLY J.

. . . . . Nashville on the High Seas

SLATE, MIKE

. . . . . A. N. Eshman and Radnor College

. . . . . Buchanan’s Station: The Battle That Saved the Cumberland Settlements

. . . . . Buchanan’s Station and Cemetery

. . . . . The Confederate Twenty-Dollar Irony

. . . . . Daniel Boone in Nashville

. . . . . Francis Baily and the Flavor of the Tennessee Frontier

. . . . . Is Daniel Boone Our Father?

. . . . . John Montgomery’s Nashville Nap

. . . . . Major John Buchanan (1759-1832)

. . . . . Nashville Founding Factors

. . . . . Plowing for the Future: Peabody’s Knapp Farm Adventure

. . . . . The Relevance of 1850s Nashville

. . . . . Sarah “Sally” Ridley Buchanan (ca. 1773-1831)

. . . . . A Souvenir from the 1920s

. . . . . Ten Important Dates in Nashville History

. . . . . University of Nashville in the DAB

. . . . . Warren Brothers Sash & Door: A Venerable Nashville Business

. . . . . Where Is the Buchanan Station Sword?

SOUTHARD, STEWART

. . . . . 1797 Vermin Law

ST. JOHN, BEVERLY 

. . . . . “He Came into This World Drawing”: Ernest A. Pickup, 1887-1970

STUBBS, REBECCA HARRIS

. . . . . J. Percy Priest: A Fifty-Year Retrospect

SUMMERVILLE, JAMES

. . . . . Battle of Nashville Monument: Notes from the 1997-1999 Restoration

. . . . . School Desegregation in Nashville

TURNER, JOANN

. . . . . The Move to Nashville

WATSON, STEVE

. . . . . Thomas S. Watson Sr.: Miller, Ironmaster, & Business Partner of Andrew Jackson

WHITE, ASHLEY LAYHEW

. . . . . Slavery at the Hermitage

WHITWORTH, LU

. . . . . A History of the Buchanan Log House

WILLIAMS, MARY B.

. . . . . Hermitage Hotel Memories since 1929

WILLIAMS, ROBERT LYLE

. . . . . John Dillahunty and Baptist Origins in Nashville

WILSON, JOSEF

. . . . . A History of the Buchanan Log House         

WILSON, SUSAN DOUGLAS

. . . . . The Mill Creek Valley Turnpike

. . . . . Touring Elm Hill Pike

WOOD, E. THOMAS, and ALLEN FORKUM

. . . . . The Zollicoffer-Marling Duel (1852)

WOOD, LEONARD N.

. . . . . Duncan College Preparatory School for Boys 

Jonathan Jennings’ Will

Primary Source Document, transcribed by Debie Cox, author of Nashville History blog.

Editor’s Note: Historian Debie Cox discovered the Jennings will in the Metro Archives in 2001. Jennings’ tragic death soon after he drew it up gives unusual poignancy to the document. The will is historically significant because it is likely the oldest surviving document from Nashville, other than the Cumberland Compact itself.

Jonathan Jennings and his family were among the group of pioneers who journeyed with the John Donelson flotilla to the Cumberland Settlements. Donelson recorded in his journal on March 8, 1780, that Indians had attacked the flotilla, and that the Jennings family had been left behind as the settlers in the other boats made their escape.

The Jennings boat had indeed survived, but not without casualties. Jennings’ daughter Elizabeth, wife of Ephraim Peyton, had given birth the day before the attack. In the confusion of the fighting, her baby was killed. Jonathan Jennings Jr., son of the elder Jennings, had jumped from the boat along with two other men. Although young Jennings, who was probably in his early teens, and one of the others made it to shore, the third man drowned. Jennings Jr. and his companion were quickly captured by the Indians, who scalped Jennings and killed the other man. Young Jennings, who had survived his injuries, was eventually rescued by a trader who agreed to pay his ransom, and he was later able to reunite with his family in the Cumberland Settlements. After the attack, the remaining members of the Jennings family had continued on their journey, arriving at Fort Nashborough on April 24, 1780.

According to J. G. M. Ramsey in his Annals of Tennessee, Jonathan Jennings Sr., was himself killed by Indians three or four months later, in July or August 1780. He left an undated will, which was presented to the Davidson County court in July 1784 and proven on the oaths of James Robertson and William Fletcher. The will had also been witnessed by Zachariah White, who had died at the Battle of the Bluffs near Fort Nashborough in April 1781. The signatures of Jennings, Robertson, and White can be verified through comparison with their signatures on the Cumberland Compact, which all three men had signed in May of 1780. The will reads as follows:

In the name of God Amen I Jonathan Jennings of North Carolina on Cumberland River having this day Received several wounds from the Indians and calling to mind the mortality of my Body do make and Ordain this to be my last will & Testament And first of all I give and recommend my soul to God that gave it and my body to be disposed of at the Discretion of my executors And as touching my Worldly affairs I dispose of them in manner following Viz

Item I give and bequeath to my    It is my Desire that my Estate be Equally divided between my Wife my sons William, Edmond, Elizabeth Haranor Mary Aggy Anne & Susannah all but such a part as shall be hereafter disposed of

Item I give and bequeath to my son Jonathan who was Scalped by Indians and rendered incapable of getting his living a Negrow girl Milla & her increase who is to remain with my beloved wife till my son comes of age Also a Choice Rifle Gun & a Horse and Saddle Item I give my beloved wife Four Choice Cows and Caves The Wards Milla and her increase and the Ward Jonathan being interlined I devise that my Loveing Wife and my son Edmond be Executrix & Executor of this my last Will & Testament
Signed Sealed & Published in Presents
of Jonathan Jenings
Zach White
Js. Robertson
William Fletcher

Plowing for the Future: Peabody’s Knapp Farm Adventure

by Mike Slate.

George Peabody College’s Knapp Farm and its sister institution, the Seaman A. Knapp School of Country Life, began operations on Elm Hill Pike in 1915. Financed by a $250,000 philanthropic endowment and other funds raised throughout the South, the farm and its associated agricultural school was a memorial to Seaman Knapp, an agronomist and leader in farm demonstration work. Eventually the farm grew to 315 acres and became nationally known for putting modern agricultural theory into practice. Many of its pioneering practices were at first ridiculed as “college ideas” but later became accepted as standard techniques. One source of pride was the farm’s outstanding herd of registered Holstein cattle, perhaps the first to graze in the pastures of the South.

The farm was situated in a bend in the Mill Creek along the old Chicken Pike/Mud Tavern pioneer route. The farmland included the site of historic Buchanan’s Station, one of the original Cumberland settlements where a handful of settlers withstood one of the last great Indian onslaughts in Nashville’s history. Today, the Buchanan’s Station historical marker and the cemetery where Major Buchanan and his wife are buried have survived the industrialization of the area.

Buchanan’s Station Cemetery prior to its renovation. (NHN photo)

In 1923 Peabody established its Knapp Farm Club House on the exact site of the old Buchanan stockade. This stately colonial mansion was a social center for the college for about forty years, and its bucolic setting along with the hypnotic sounds of the rushing Mill Creek enchanted thousands of students, faculty, and other visitors over the years.

Despite the disapproval and counter proposals of some alumni and faculty, the Peabody Board of Trustees sold the farm and its club house for one million dollars in 1965. Today, many important commercial facilities—including those of Standard Candy Company and Gibson Guitar—are located along Massman Drive, which cuts through the heart of the once-great farm.

Since no vestige of Knapp Farm remains today, Nashvillians are generally unaware of its existence. One way to ensure the future recognition of the Knapp Farm adventure would be to erect a suitable historical marker along Elm Hill Pike or Massman Drive. (1997)