Once More, Unto the Breech…

To round out a very busy and productive month, remember that this Sunday, October 30th, will be one more walking tour of downtown Nashville, offered by Echoes of Nashville. It’s about a mile of walking, so wear comfortable shoes. The book will be for sale as usual if anyone wants a signed copy. You can get tickets at the Echoes of Nashville website here.

(One important note – the tour starts at Legislative Plaza at 3 PM, not at Bridgestone Arena, where most of their tours begin. Consult the oracle Google if there are questions. I’ll be standing near the steps that lead up to the big bronze naked fella.)

This will round out our October blitz, which has been a blast so far, so thanks for everyone who’ve come out to hear me speak or purchased the book. There will be other opportunities to hear the talk or meet and greet in the future, but this was a marathon.

Next time I hope to begin putting some new stories on the blog, so stay tuned.

 

 

This is Crazy…

…But good crazy. I’ve been busy as all get out recently.

Three more dates to tell folks about: Tomorrow (Saturday, Oct. 22) at 10 AM is another downtown walking tour from Echoes of Nashville. The tour starts at Legislative Plaza (not the Bridgestone Arena as is usual – important to note), and lasts about an hour. Tickets are available here. There will be one more tour this month on Sunday, October 30th at 3 PM – the day before (dun,dun,dun) Halloween. So come on out and get your creepy on.

And tomorrow is Hauntings at the Hermitage at Andrew Jackson’s former home. The event lasts from 4 PM to 10 PM. From 4-7 the atmosphere is “kid friendly,” and I’ll be telling spooky ghost stories from Andrew Jackson’s time. From 7-10, we’ll be talking about more grownup themes, so I’ll be telling some stories from the book. You can buy it from me there as well. For more info, check out the Hermitage website here.

I’ve been too busy to add more stories recently, but that will change soon. Some good research going on and some interesting things to talk about. As soon as everything mellows out a bit I’ll be back to tell some interesting tales about Nashville’s dark side.

Later!

 

 

 

Sunday, Sunday, Sunday…

And Saturday, Saturday, Saturday…Big weekend this time around, so drop in to talk if you get the chance.

Today (Saturday the 15th), from 3-6 PM,  I’ll be selling and signing books at the Nashville City Cemetery tour. They’re featuring stories of seasonal creepiness based on folks who came to an untimely end. Should be a lively tour, and I’ll be there in case you want some additional atmosphere to take home and read at leisure. Check out their awesome flyer below, or at this link:

mayhemcrypt3

If you can’t make it today, I’ll be at the Southern Festival of Books tomorrow (Sunday the 16th), Legislative Plaza, Room 12 from 3-4 PM. Myself and James D. Squires, author of West End, will be co-panelists talking about Back Rooms and Back Alleys: Tales from Old Nashville, followed by a book signing. They’re forecasting a lovely day, so come out and hear stories of Nashville’s past from a couple of folks who helped move the rock (so to speak). Get more information here.

Hope to see you there!

 

Upcoming Event

BTW, if you like the story about Jesse Bryan that I posted, you ought to come out to see the Nashville City Cemetery’s annual tour on October 15, from 3:00 to 7:00 PM, with the last tour leaving at 6.

Interpreters will be posted throughout the cemetery, portraying a selection of those interred there, and the theme this year revolves around some of the more tragic figures in the cemetery, as well as some of the…naughtier ones, shall we say? Should be a lively lineup.

And one of those on the roster is Mr. Bryan, who I’ve already blogged about, so you can hear the rest of his story – or at least his version of it 🙂  As an added bonus, you can come see me there as well – I’ll be on hand to sign my book and meet and greet, so come on out and see me after you enjoy the tour!

spooky-pic
Trust me, it really looks this spooky.

Old Soldiers Fade Away – Part 2

According to an old timer, Chandler’s was the first grave at the Sulphur Spring, in an isolated grove on land deemed unsuitable for farming. Chandler had come into town in poor health from an outpost (possibly Fort Southwest Point) and died at Talbot’s Tavern on Public Square. His burial took place on a snowy day in late December, 1801, with a small contingent of citizens and army officers in attendance. They hoped that it would prove a suitable location for his final resting place. They were wrong.

By 1859, the vicinity around the grave of Lt. Chandler had become – to put it mildly – an eyesore. The once genteel public park had become the hangout of “disreputable” sorts, a popular trysting point for adventurous couples. It was apparently some of these ne’er-do-wells who had vandalized the old grave in the first place, breaking two feet of the slab off the stone lid.

Due to the deteriorating condition of the area, a motion was forwarded to the City Council by the Tennessee Historical Society to reinter the lieutenant’s remains in Mount Olivet Cemetery in a more fitting manner. September 23rd was named as moving day.

It was quite a to-do. Major Adolphus Heiman, the noted architect, was named as the Marshal of the ceremony, and Edward East of the City Council was named speaker. The cadets from the University of Nashville Military Academy were invited, but apparently declined. However, the “German Yagers” (sic – Jägers) probably a light infantry militia  company from Germantown, provided an escort. The body was exhumed at around 9 A.M.

To everyone’s surprise, despite the frequent floods that had washed over the crypt, the skeleton was intact, and the papers noted that badly-healed breaks in the right arm and leg showed that the lieutenant had “passed through some rough scenes” during his service. The bones were placed in a velvet-lined casket with thirteen silver stars on it.

At 2:00 P.M. the remains were escorted from Public Square to McKendree Church where the funeral service was read by Rev. Charles T. Quintard (soon to be noted as a leading Confederate chaplain). From there it was on to Mount Olivet, the body escorted by veterans of 1812, the Seminole War, and the Mexican War. September 23 was the anniversary of the Battle of Monterey, Mexico, making it doubly meaningful for the old soldiers.

Chandler was buried beneath a tree on a high hill in the new cemetery, to the accompaniment of a twenty-one gun salute fired by the “Yagers.” The old stone sarcophagus was too far gone to save, but the plans were to put an appropriate new marker over his grave.

And then the Civil War happened. And apparently all that was forgotten.

Today, Chandler remains unmarked, more than 150 years after his second funeral. I made a search recently for him, and the records indicate that he’s buried in Plot No. 118, Section No. 1. The problem is…there is no 118.

The numbered plots seem to end with 117. As far as anyone can tell, this earliest of Nashville burials lies today in an unmarked grave, probably next to the old sunken “Hearse Road” that runs through Section 1. The photo below shows the approximate spot.

Chandler

Perhaps one day his resting place can be confirmed and a suitable marker placed above his grave. But for right now, one of Nashville’s links to its frontier past lies forgotten, surrounded by elegant Victorian markers from a more “settled” time.

More to come next time.

 

Old Soldiers Fade Away – Part 1

ANNND, we’re back. Sorry ’bout that. I’ll try not to be away that long again.

Our next tale involves neither murder nor mayhem, but an interesting tale about a grave that was lost…then found…then lost once more. And therein lies some information on Nashville’s earliest graveyard and its current rebirth into…something else.

Five days before Christmas in 1801, a soldier died in Nashville. Lieutenant Richard Chandler was the paymaster of the 4th U.S. Infantry, and a veteran of the many wars fought in the “Northwest Territory” (modern-day Ohio). Originally from Virginia, he was commissioned an Ensign in the 4th Sub-Legion on May 12, 1794, and in August of that year he fought with “Mad Anthony” Wayne at the bloody Battle of Fallen Timbers. He was made paymaster on July 22, 1795.  When the 4th Sub-Legion was re-designated the 4th Infantry on Nov. 1, 1796, Chandler went with it. He was promoted to 1st Lieutenant on July 31, 1798, still acting as paymaster. During this period, he did outpost duty with his command, manning far-flung posts in Tennessee and Georgia.

After Chandler’s untimely death he was interred in an impressive stone-box tomb in the town’s burying ground, which at that time was along the banks of the now-vanished Lick Branch near the Sulphur Spring. This ad-hoc cemetery grew rapidly after the first settlers began to die under the musket balls and tomahawks of the Chickasaw, Cherokee, and Creek warriors of the 1780s.

In 1822 the new City Cemetery was founded, and the old one fell out of fashion. Gradually it fell into decay as the Sulphur Spring was reinvented as the town’s new pleasure gardens. If the original graves weren’t relocated into the new cemetery, they were gradually overgrown and forgotten.

Chandler was lucky. Just as the Civil War was looming on the horizon a new interest in the early pioneers manifested itself, and a movement developed to preserve some of the relics of that age. On July 7, 1859 several sketches were made of the old burial. The worn epitaph was recorded thusly:

Chandler Inscription

 

The location of the tomb was also sketched:

Chandler's Tomb

It’s a remarkable snapshot of a long vanished Nashville staple – up until the Civil War and after “the Springs” were where folks of all walks of life went to pass time, and to be seen and see. Long before baseball settled there in the late 19th century, it was Nashville’s first public park. The tomb stood across the branch from the Springhouse itself, on a tall spit of land  at the end of Cherry Street (now 4th Ave.)

The sketch is not to scale, but by comparison with other maps done about the same time (the Army was very interested in correct cartography during the Late Unpleasantness), it is possible to come close. The location appears to be somewhere in the parking lot of the new First Tennessee Park baseball stadium.

Needless to say, there is little left to remind one of the spot’s 19th century appearance today, but the next time you attend a game there, hopefully you can have a new appreciation for the history of the spot as you trudge wearily towards your car under a hot summer sun.

As to Chandler, what happened to him? In 1859 a “memorial” was given to City Council, proposing to move the grave “to either the City Cemetery or to Mt. Olivet…”

More on that next time.

 

 

 

Requiem for Ike

One hundred years ago today an era of Nashville history came to a close.

On the morning of February 3, 1916 former gambler and saloon keeper Ike Johnson committed suicide in his room at the Southern Turf building on 4th Avenue, just days before he was to be evicted from the room where he had lived for the previous twenty years.

Ike had been one of the leading lights of the Gilded Age saloon scene in town, owning and operating some of the “toniest” establishments in the city, only to lose it all when Prohibition was enacted following the killing of his old nemesis, Senator Edward Ward Carmack, in 1908.

He was known as a glittering tough, a generous gambler, an abstemious saloon man, and a lifelong bachelor with a soft heart for children and animals. And though he himself said that “It is not good for a man to live the way I have lived,” his passing was mourned by even those opposed to his lifestyle. With his death, one of the last links to Nashville’s opulent Victorian highlife was severed.

He rests today in a quiet spot in Mount Olivet Cemetery. His palace, the Southern Turf, still lives on today, reincarnated as a modern office building. It is one of the last reminders of the old “Gentleman’s Quarter,” where nighttime never seemed to fall before 1900.

ST Small
Ike Johnson’s Last Stand: The Southern Turf Building on 4th Avenue.

All Around the Town

Nashville, like many cities, has a checkered relationship with its past. History often makes way for the new, and what remains is often hidden beneath layers of modern development. There are plenty of hidden slices of the past around the city, often in the most unusual locations. Every week, I’ll try to share some of the sites that this project has brought me in contact with.

First up, we have the Soldiers’ Rest Cemetery. This tiny plot is all that remains of the plantation of Gen. Thomas Overton (1753-1824), a veteran of the Revolutionary War. Overton served for  seven years with Washington’s army, originally in the 9th Virginia Regiment, and later with the 4th Continental Light Dragoons, seeing action at places like Germantown, Monmouth, and Yorktown, as well as wintering at Valley Forge. He moved to Tennessee around 1804, and founded a farm not far from that of Andrew Jackson. The two struck up a lifelong friendship. In fact, Overton later stood as Jackson’s second in his duel with Charles Dickinson in 1806.

The cemetery today stands in a small lot surrounded by houses and businesses near the intersection of Donelson Avenue and Old Hickory Boulevard. I visited it the day after Halloween, and was greeted by a coal black cat who followed me around the entire time, just…watching me. After thanking him, I doused myself and my car with holy water and took my leave.

This little plot once stood close to Overton’s mansion, appropriately named “Soldier’s Rest,” which was the centerpiece of his sprawling plantation. What brought me here? Well, in the fall of 1819 Overton’s place became the scene of a remarkable drama when his overseer was murdered by one of the slaves who worked on the farm. During the ensuing investigation, the slain overseer’s wife was accused of conspiring with the slave to kill her husband.

So what happened next?

Well, that’s why I want you to pick up a copy of the book when it comes out 🙂

For more information about Overton, here’s his page on the great oracle Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Overton