There are at least twelve (12) African Americans buried in Polk Cemetery in Bolivar, Hardeman County, Tennessee.1 Various documentation contains the names of these individuals: three blacks have headstones; seven are mentioned in the Diary of John Houston Bills;2, 3 one is documented on March 2, 1902 in a Memphis, Tennessee Commercial Appeal newspaper article about Ezekiel Polk;4 and the twelfth is recorded in burial records of St. James Episcopal Church in Bolivar.5

* Three graves of African-Americans with headstones:

1. John McNeal, April 16, 1907, age 57;

2. Lila, wife of John, September 1909; [John and Lila had no children. Their estate was left to a niece, Lily Moore.]

3. In Memory of Rueben B., faithful servant [of John H. Bills] and honest man, 1846.

* Seven African-American burials mentioned in John H. Bills’ diary:2, 3

1. Charlotte, died July 28, 1853. “Thursday, July 28, 1853 … Our house servant, Charlotte, died this morning at 3 o’clock. She had been sick for 24 days of typhoid fever, during all of which time Dr. Neely attended her without affecting the slightest good in her case. We bury her in the family [Polk] Cemetery at 5 p.m.”

2. Victoria’s infant Emma, February 24, 1863 – Tuesday August 18, 1863. Victoria was a house servant who was a “general attendant.” It appears she attended Clara Bills (John H. Bills’ daughter). “Wednesday, September 18, 1861, Clara Bills & svt Victoria off for a visit to her friends at Huntsville.”

 

It appears Victoria was acquired by John H. Bills between 1845 and 1856. He referred to her several times in his diary. She “jumped the broom” with Willis, a servant of Dr. Wood, on Monday, December 29, 1862. She had an infant on February 24, 1863, who died on August 18, 1863. “Early this morning Victoria’s infant Emma died, disease convulsions from whooping cough … I bury Vic’s infant in the Polk Cemetery.”

3.- 7. Sam Bills, his wife Lucretia (Creasy), Creasy’s daughter Martha

Martha’s husband Willis, and Sam’s “only son.”

Sam Bills, circa 1797 – September 10, 1869. Sam was buried in Polk

Cemetery one day after his death (September 11) “beside his only son.”

 

John H. Bills had purchased Sam on February 19, 1839 from John Lea for $650.00. (John Lea was the person who sold The Pillars to John H. Bills. Hence Sam changed owners but stayed on the same plantation.) Sam was about 42 at the time. Sam held a special place with John H. Bills. Bills had Sam baptized “by sprinkling” on Saturday,

June 19, 1858. Bills’ diary contains no other mention of baptism of any other slaves.

Sam was a “good old servant” who had been with Bills “more than 30 years.” Bills wrote that Sam died of “old age – he was a faithful honest man, refused to leave me when free & was true to my interest during the War of the Rebellion – peace to his ashes.”

Lucretia (Creasy) Bills, wife of Sam, circa 1805 – December 24, 1870. John H. Bills purchased Creasy and her two children (Bob and Martha) on July 17, 1833 from Humphrey Keeble. Creasy was about 28, Bob was 2, and Martha was 2.

 

Creasy served as a milkmaid for Bills. She died just over one year after the death of her husband Sam. “Old Creasy who has been sick for 3 weeks expires at 9 ½ a.m.” Creasy was buried the next day at 2 p.m.

Martha Bills Mayhugh, daughter of Lucretia (Creasy), circa 1831 – September 17/18, 1870. Martha “jumped the broom” with Willis, another slave of John H. Bills. After Willis’ death, she married WilliamMayhugh on May 26, 1866.

On September 18, 1870, John H. Bills wrote, “Arrive at home at 5 ½ o’clock [a.m.] & find my ex servant Martha dead. She has been sick along time, leaves 7 or 8 helpless children.”6

Willis, husband of Martha, circa 1817 – September 16, 1862. John H. Bills purchased Willis on November 28, 1849 from Lucy Wynne. Willis was about 32 at the time. One day after his death, Willis was buried in Polk Cemetery.

Sam’s only son – name and dates unknown; died before his father, who died on September 10, 1869.

* Jim, slave of Ezekiel Polk, circa 1776 – between 1860 and 1870.4

According to a Commercial Appeal newspaper article about Ezekiel Polk dated March 2, 1902, “… In 1849 Edwin Polk gave the land for Polk Cemetery in southwest Bolivar, ‘to be forever a family burying ground.’ To this place Ezekiel Polk’s remains were removed in the early 50s, and a second monument erected. Close by was put to rest ‘Uncle Jim,’ his faithful servant, who followed his master’s fortunes from Pennsylvania to Middle Tennessee; thence to West Tennessee. A daughter of this same Uncle Jim is at present living in the Polk place in her ninety-sixth year.” [Some of the dates in this article are not accurate. According to John H. Bills’ diary:

Thursday, November 20, 1845 – A fine day. We spend it removing the remains of our friends to the Polk Cemetery. We succeed in removing all the tombstones & the bones of Colonel Ezekiel Polk ….

It also appears that Ezekiel Polk brought Jim to Tennessee from North Carolina, not Pennsylvania.]  Note: After Ezekiel Polk’s death, Jim became a slave of Ezekiel’s son Edwin Polk, and, after Edwin’s death in 1854, was inherited by Edwin’s wife, Octavia Jones Polk.

The daughter of Jim, who was referenced in the Commercial Appeal article, appears to have been a freedwoman named Lively Polk.

* Rena, slave of Major [E. P.] McNeal, died March 6, 1865.5

St. James Episcopal Church documented the funeral of: “… Rena an old servant of Maj. McNeal’s at Polk Cemetery – services at the grave.”

It is reasonable to assume there are other African Americans buried in Polk Cemetery. The above twelve slaves/freedpersons are ones about whom we have documentation.

 

SOURCES:

1 Polk Cemetery is located on S. Union Street in Bolivar, Hardeman County, Tennessee. Some of Hardeman County’s most prominent citizens are buried there, including Colonel Ezekiel Polk, grandfather of President James K. Polk.

The twelve African Americans mentioned above are buried in the Southwest corner lot.

2 John Houston Bills Papers, Series 2, Diary, 1843-1871. Southern Historical Collection, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Microfilm Accession Number J8.

3 “Diary of John Houston Bills,” Bills Family Papers, 1826-1877. Manuscript Unit, Tennessee State Library & Archives, Nashville, Microfilm Accession Number 123, 1972. (This diary is an extracted, typed transcription by Virginia M. Bowman, third great granddaughter of John Houston Bills. It contains some errors.)

4 “Ezekiel Polk, His Life and Character,” Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Tennessee, March 2, 1902.

5 “Funerals,” Church Records. St. James Episcopal Church, 223 Lafayette Street, Bolivar, Hardeman County, Tennessee, page 171.

6 Names of nine children of Martha Bills Mayhugh are noted in Plantations of John H. Bills, his Slaves and Their Descendants, 1820 – 1920, by Katie Brown Bennett. A copy of this book is available in the Hardeman County Regional Library, Bolivar.

 

COMPILED AND SUBMITTED BY: Katie Brown Bennett

Transcription submitted by:  Anita Powell, New Mexico, E-mail Anita

Through the courtesy of Mrs. E.M. Doyle, we have been handed a copy of the Boliver Bulletin of May 12, 1933, containing pictures and names of 80 Confederate soldiers of Hardeman County who attended a reunion held at Cheshier Springs, three miles south of Bolivar, on September 14th and 15th, 1900, at which 5,000 people were present.

The principal speaker of the occasion was Hon. M.R. Patterson, of Memphis.  Capt. John W. Morton, of Nashville, was also among the speakers.

The above picture, taken on the grounds by H.C. Calahan, a former photographer of Boliver, shows the old soldiers who attended that reunion.

The late J.W. Jacobs supplied the names underneath the picture. Not a single one of these old soldiers is living today.

There are numerous descendants of these gallant man still living in Hardeman County, who will look upon this picture with pride and reverence and will carefully preserve it.  The record of the Confederate soldier is one of the brightest pages of American history.

 Top Row (left to right:)  William McKinnie, Ed Durrett, Mike McKinnie, George Pirtle, Jim Hackney, Dr. Jim Neely, Mr. Richards, Joe Ervin, Stanton Blaylock, Jim Cheshier, Pete Mashburn, Sam Clinton.

June 29 1901
Hardeman County, TN.
Transcribed By: Charlotte Holloway

At a meeting of the bar of Hardeman County, held at the Court House in Bolivar, Tennessee on June 29 1901 for the purpose of taking appropriate action on the death of Captain Robert H. Wood, late a member of the bar of said County, A.J. Coates was called to the chair and C.A. Miller was elected Secretary on motion the chair appointed C.A. Miller, J.A. Foster, Hugh E. Carter and A.J. Coates a committee on the resolution. The committee on resolutions reported the following, which were unanimously adopted.

The Resolution

Captain Robert H. Wood lawyer and gentleman after having practiced his profession for more than fifty years as a member of the bar of Hardeman County, Tennessee has been called to his final reward, and we have met to express our estimate of his high character and many virtues and our sorrow because we no longer have him with us. To guide us in our high calling by his wisdom, experience and example. A high sense of honor and gentlemanly instincts he had by birth and from these he never departed. He was born in Albemarle County, Virginia on the 9th day of March 1826, the child of James Wood and Frances Wood formerly Allen. He came of a distinguished family of lawyers in Virginia from whence his father and mother came with him to Tennessee. He was educated at Centre College, Danville, Kentucky and the University of Virginia. After his college course was finished he began the practice of law at Bolivar, Tenn., reading law in the office of Judge Austin Miller and had marked success from the beginning. On January 7, 1847 he was married to Miss Mary C. Bills, daughter of John H. Bills of Bolivar with whom he lived many years in happiness, but who died in 1868 leaving him three daughters. Now Mrs. Dr. Hugh W. Tate of Bolivar, Mrs. William House of Franklin and Mrs. Ben Wilson of Baltimore. Mr. Wood never married again. His profession after the death of his devoted wife being the object of his chief attention and zealous care. He was a great advocate and Jury lawyer; A man of truth and honor. He never fomented litigation nor encouraged malicious and wrongful suits advising his clients always to compromise when the same was honorable and right. He possessed more the confidence of the people of his County then any man who ever lived in it and his advice was sought by all sides and in all matters. Prior to the war he was a partner of Judge Thomas R. Smith. After the war he formed the partnership of Wood & McNeal and this alliance with Captain Albert T. McNeal lasted till his death. His practice for more than half a century was large and profitable so that he massed a fortune many years before he died. He was also a man of true religious convictions and a zealous member of the Presbyterian Church. He was elected twice a member of the State Legislature and served in the sessions of 1853 and 1855. After this he eschewed politics and was never a candidate for office though his popularity was always unbounded. When the War Between the States came on he valiantly espoused the cause of the South and raised a Company of Infantry and served conspicuously with the same. With him right and duty was a watch word and he nobly did these in all his affairs of life. One June 22 1901 he died respected, loved and honored by all who knew him.

Therefore, Resolved that the death of Robert H. Wood is a great loss to the bar of the State, to us and to this community.

Resolved that it is well for us that he lived and that dead we honor him with our praise, love and gratitude, especially for his many personal acts of kindness to us as fellow members of the same bar.

Resolved that to the surviving members of his family we extend our most respectfully and heartfelt sympathy.

Resolved that the Honorable J.A. Foster be requested to present to the Circuit Court a copy of these resolutions, that A.F. McNeal present same to the Supreme Court, A.J. Coates present same to the Chancery Court and Hugh E. Carter present same to the County Court, that C.A. Miller present same to the U.S. Court of this district, with the request that the same be spread on the minutes of said Courts. That the same be published in our local County papers, and that we attend his funeral.

Committee
A.J. Coates
H.E. Carter
J.A. Foster
C.A. Miller