Chapter 15
THE
PANIC OF 1819
SMITH
COUNTY, TENNESSEE
1817-1820
Back in Smith County, business was
thriving, just as was everywhere else in Tennessee. These were boom years for
American farmers, plantation owners, businessmen and merchants. Due to the dire
need for cotton in the suffering European markets, the price per pound of
American cotton had nearly quintupled in value from 7 ½ ¢ in 1812, to 20 ¢ by
1817, peaking at 34 ¢ in 1818. Tobacco was also surging during this time,
doubling from 4 ¢ per pound in 1814, to 8 ¢ in 1816, reaching its highest value
in 1818 at 9 ¢ per pound.
As the price for produce soared,
farmers desired to purchase more land to increase their yield. Planters began
buying more slaves, to produce more cotton to buy more land and slaves. In
addition land speculators began purchasing land at low prices as an investment
of selling it at a profit when the land values rose. Early in the boom,
frontier land could be purchased for a minimum of $2 per acre. However, as the markets
surged, planters, farmers and land speculators realized that with the high
profit on cotton, tobacco and grains, they could buy their land outright in
only four years. This caused land values to soar, some to over $100 per acre during
the height of the frenzy. The banks also got caught up in the frenzy,
carelessly offering loans beyond their lending capabilities. Land speculation
became dangerously epidemic, no one anticipating the boom would eventually end.
These were exciting days. Middle
Tennessee was thriving and Lewis Shapard was at full capacity shipping and
receiving merchandise along the Cumberland River, not to mention his other
enterprises in cotton and tobacco. His son William B. Shapard was learning the
art of business from firsthand experience while working with his father. From
all accounts, Lewis did not appear to invest in land speculation during this time,
as he left no deed record of purchasing land in Smith County or elsewhere in
Tennessee. However, he may have rented land planting tobacco and cotton,
splitting the profits with the owner. Regardless, it is evident that during the
boom, Lewis’ wealth was greatly tied up in slaves, cotton, tobacco and
merchandise, banking on an ever profitable future.
On March 27, 1817, Lewis Shapard was
the plaintiff in a court case he had filed against William Antony. Lewis and
Mr. Anthony came to an agreement, and the lawsuit was dropped after the
defendant assumed all court costs involved in the case. Recall that Mr. Anthony
had lived near Lewis Shapard in Williamson County, and they may have known each
other previously in Caswell County. In Tennessee, the two men had a business
relation with one another, the extent of which is not clearly known. However, for
a time, William was engaged in the same type of commerce as Lewis, and the men
may have had a partnership. In 1821, it was recorded that William Anthony was selling
tobacco from planters in Smith County, Tennessee to buyers at the markets of New
Orleans, Louisiana.
On May 1, 1817, Lewis Shapard was a
witness for a deed between James Hart of Sumner County and Davis Grisham of
Smith County, for 40 acres of land on Spring Creek. James Hart (1756-1819) was
a fascinating early pioneer of Tennessee. He married Sarah Hamilton, the
daughter of Patrick Hamilton, in 1788 in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina. In
1797 he purchased over 400 acres of land in what would become Sumner County,
Tennessee from Thomas Donoho of Caswell County. He was elected as a Justice of
the Peace of Sumner County in 1799. In 1800, he purchased a grist mill near his
land on Goose Creek from Charles Donoho. James Hart was extremely industrious
with his property, and over the years operated a tavern and inn, ran a popular
racetrack that was visited by Andrew Jackson, and even operated a Ferry on the
nearby Cumberland River. His land became the town of Hartsville in 1817, and
exists to the present day.
Davis Grisham (1790-1872) married
Sarah “Sally” Gregory (1798-1878) in Smith County Tennessee in 1816. She was
the daughter of William Gregory. Davis fought in the war of 1812, enlisting in
1814 and being discharged in 1815. He and his family migrated to Pope County,
Illinois in the 1830s, resided there for the remainder of his life.
Interestingly, Spring Creek was a branch of Peyton Creek near where Lewis
resided in Smith County. Other people who lived along the creek were William
Gregory, Peter Grisham, Davis Grisham, Harris Grisham, and Wilson Cage, to name
a few. On May 12, Lewis Shapard and Peter Grisham met at the court house at
Carthage and proved, as witnesses, in open court the above mentioned deed to be
recorded.
Lewis son, William B. Shapard, was a
witness on February 16, 1818, for an indenture made between James Ralston of
Jackson County, Tennessee and Elisha Dillard of Smith County for 130 acres of
land in Smith County “in the valley where William Huffmore lives.” Other
witnesses to the deed were Robert W. Carlisle, B. Ford and William Buk. During
the time of the signing of this deed, William B. Shapard was 20 years old.
According to Tennessee law, an
estranged spouse could not file for divorce unless abandoned for a minimum of
two years. Recall that Lewis Shapard had notified the local newspapers of his
wife’s desertion from his family on February 3, 1816. Just over two years
later, on March 26, 1818, being the next available session of the Smith County
Circuit Court, Lewis officially file a petition to divorce Elizabeth (Parrish)
Shapard. The court ordered that a copy of the petition be sent with a subpoena
to be served on Mrs. Shapard by the sheriff of Smith County, with a trial date
of October 10, 1818. The day of the hearing, Lewis Shapard arrived at court;
however, Elizabeth failed to appear to answer the petition. Lewis asked the
judge to have her appear at the next session of Circuit Court on March 26,
1819. The motion was granted by the judge, stipulating that if she did not
appear at the next meeting of court then the judge shall fully rule on the
petition in her absence. A new subpoena was issued to Mrs. Shapard and was
delivered to her by the sheriff of Smith County.
Between court dates, on December 1,
1818, Elizabeth (Parrish) Shapard’s adult children: Polly (Parrish) Seat, David
Parrish, William Parrish, Francis (Parrish) Anderson, Nancy Parrish, and Susannah
Parrish, sold the 150 acre Parrish plantation in Wilson County to Joseph Irby. Apparently,
Elizabeth (Parrish) Shapard decided to permanently reside elsewhere and gave
her children permission to sell her dower’s portion, as well as, the rest of
their father’s estate. Elizabeth Shapard may have needed to sell, liquidating the
funds to pay her creditors, after Lewis Shapard declined to cover her expenses.
Many years later, in 1825, Betsy S. Parrish, who was a minor at the time her
siblings sold the family plantation, legally relinquished to Mr. Irby all her
remaining interest in the plantation as a rightful heir to the estate of Henry
Parrish.
At the next session of the Smith
County Circuit Court held at the courthouse at Carthage on March 26, 1819, both
Lewis and Elizabeth Shapard arrived and met with the judge regarding Mr.
Shapard’s petition for divorce. Apparently, the evidence or requirements for
the divorce was lacking and the judge allowed Lewis four days to amend his
petition. Lewis returned to court on March 29th, and Mrs. Shapard’s
attorney, James Tumpy agreed to allow Mr. Shapard additional time to further
amend his petition to the satisfaction of the court, ensuring that the hearing
would occur during the present term of court, yet, in the absence of Mrs.
Shapard.
The
following day, on March 30, 1819, Lewis returned to the courthouse at Carthage
and Judge Thomas Stewart granted his divorce, stating; “Be it remembered that
at this term (to wit) March Term 1819 this cause came on to be heard, and was
heard before the Honorable Thomas Stewart, one of the judges at the Circuit Court
of Law and Equity in and for the State of Tennessee and now presiding in the
third judicial circuit, when it appeared to the satisfaction of the court that
the complainant filed his petition on the 26th day of March 1818,
and that a copy of said petition under the seal of this honorable court
together with subpoena to answer issue against the said defendant on the 12th
day of November 1818 and was returned “executed” and that on the 24th
day of August 1818, an alias subpoena to answer issue against said defendant
together with a copy of said complainants petition as aforesaid, what said
alias subpoena was returned by the Sherriff of Smith County “executed” and that
the said defendant appeared by her council in defense of said petitioner
without answer, and it furthermore appeared to the satisfaction of the court
that the said complainant is a citizen of the State of Tennessee and was an
inhabitant thereof one year next before filing of his said petition, and also
appeared to the court that the said defendant has been guilty of willful and
malicious desertion for the space of two years without a reasonable cause,
before filing said petition. And upon the swearing of the said petitioner and
the evidence on the part of the complainant touching the same, it is ordered
adjudged and decreed that the said Lewis Shepherd from the said bonds of
matrimony subscribing between himself and the said Elizabeth Shepherd be
dissolved and that the marriage between them be null and void, and that the
said complainant pay the costs about his petition in this behalf expended,
etc.”
On February 11, 1819, Lewis Shapard may
have spent a short time in the Smith County jail. The event leading up to his
possible incarceration occurred while he was attending the Smith County Court,
presumably unrelated to his divorce proceedings being heard in Circuit Court.
For some reason, unbeknownst to us, Lewis fell in disfavor with the judge;
whereupon, he was ordered to pay $2.00 for contempt of court and was to be
placed in custody until the fine was paid. If he did not have the funds on him,
he would have been detained in the Smith County jail at Carthage. The jail was
of log construction and had two small cells. It would have been a most
disagreeable accommodation, not to mention an embarrassment for a gentleman of
Lewis’ age and status. One possible explanation for his erratic behavior was
that the previous day, on February 10, 1819, a Grand Jury of the County Court exhibited
a Bill of Indictment against Lewis Shapard’s step-son-in-law and employee,
Samuel R. Anderson.
Lewis Shapard’s contempt of court was
strangely unusual and uncharacteristic, and seemed to foreshadow the strangely
unusual and uncharacteristic events of 1819 occurring throughout Tennessee and
beyond. In the summer of 1819, Tennessee experienced a severe drought, causing
widespread crop failure. In addition, the lack of rain caused the Cumberland
River to settle at lowest level since 1784. For Lewis this would have been a
considerable obstruction to his business, as shipping along the river at
Carthage was significantly abated or even grounded for a time. In addition, the
deficiency of crops of cotton, grain and tobacco would have further damaged his
enterprise and income.
To compound the problem, in 1819,
Tennessee and the rest of the United States experienced their first major
economic depression, known as the Panic of 1819, affecting every industry and
aspect of society with widespread ruin. The roots of the Panic occurred in 1816.
The British Empire had been engaged in war on two continents; with the United
States in the War of 1812, and with France in the Napoleonic Wars. As these
wars came to a close, the eruption of Mount Tambora was having a dramatic
effect on the climate of northern Europe, drastically affecting their crops,
reducing their food supply and ushering in widespread illness. British soldiers
returning from war were faced with high unemployment, inflation on basic
commodities and deplorable weather. British industry, especially the textile
mills which employed hundreds of thousands, was suffering from a lack of
available cotton.
In an effort to alleviate the
constriction of food and supplies, British authorities removed the customs duty
tax on American produce in order to purchase as much grain as the United States
could supply. The demand was high and the supply limited, which caused the
price of wheat, corn, and other grains and farm produce to escalate to record
breaking prices for the next two years. In addition, British authorities needed
to keep the country’s factories operational to prevent economic collapse in the
midst of this calamity. Factories focused on producing cheap exports which were
readily purchased in the growing American markets. The British textile industry
survived on raw cotton, which was greatly diminished everywhere except America.
As a result, cotton prices surged.
Interestingly, while the British
removed their duty on American goods, the United States government increased
the tariffs on all imports from England to spite the British recovery as
punishment for causing The War of 1812. It was noted in the Carthage Gazette in
April of 1816, “Britain will not look on it [the tariffs] with indifference.
She has played successful the game of crowns and at the game of commerce she is
adept not to be foiled even by the cunning hucksters [politicians] of New
England.” Oh how prophetic these words became, as England would have a
checkmate on America, in the game of commerce, in the years to come.
These were boom years for American merchants,
farmers and plantation owners. Cotton had climbed from 7 ½ ¢ per pound in 1812,
to 34 ¢ in 1818; and tobacco had more than doubled from 4 ¢ per pound in 1814,
to 9 ¢ in 1818. As prices for produce soared, farmers desired to purchase more
land to increase their yield. The banks began overextending themselves,
offering loans beyond their financial backing.
Middle Tennessee, where the Shapard’s
lived, and northern Alabama had some of the richest most fertile lands of the
frontier, particularly suited for cotton, and this land became highly desired.
The epicenter of growth for the entire boom focused at the town of Huntsville,
just below the middle Tennessee state line in Madison County, Alabama. The land
frenzy known as “Alabama Fever” swept the nation. More than 2.25 million acres
were sold in Alabama in 1819. The population grew from 10,000 in 1810 to
130,000 by 1820, allowing the Territory of Alabama sufficient population to
become a State in 1819. By 1818, there were over 260 brick houses built in
Huntsville, attesting to its wealth and development. Land values of $2 per acre
surged in this area to over $100 per acre during the height of the frenzy. And
even at that price, planters and speculators were still able to turn a profit
during the boom years. Land speculation became epidemic.
Since gold and silver were
particularly rare during this era in American history, banks were allowed to
print their own paper money. These bills were redeemable for “specie,” meaning
gold or silver, upon request of the holder at the bank. Originally, the banks
held gold and silver reserves to equal the amount of the value of paper money
printed and distributed; however, over time, banks began to over print and
distribute more bills than were backed by specie held in their bank. In
addition, since every State and locality had different paper money, the value
of that currency in trade decreased the further the distance from the bill’s
origin bank. Dollar bills from a bank in New York might trade for 80 cents in
Tennessee, and vise versa; whereas, a dollar bill originating from a bank in
Knoxville, Tennessee might trade for 95 cents in Nashville, Tennessee, and vise
versa. Paper bank notes further destabilized as early as July of 1817, when banks,
merchants and taverns in Washington City (Washington D.C.) began declining payment
with any foreign banknotes beyond its state borders, except notes from the Bank
of The United States and its branches.
The United States government
established the 2nd Bank of the United States in an effort to
standardize currency and hold its value backed by specie, however, it too fell
into corruption during the boom years and over printed its paper money beyond
what was backed in precious metals reserves, making paper money truly
valueless. A final undermining of bank note value occurred throughout 1818,
when the 2nd Bank of the United States began accumulating and
sending overseas vast amounts of specie from all available banks in order to
repay the twelve million dollars in bonds that had become due from the
acquisition of the Louisiana Purchase in 1803.
What no one anticipated was how the
eventual and inevitable recovery of the European harvests yields would affect
every aspect of the American economy. In the spring of 1818, European crops
recovered, and after two years of paying exorbitant amounts on American produce
and cotton, British Parliament played a checkmate in the game of commerce by
reinstating Corn Laws, which denied the import of foreign grains into the
country. American wheat would plummet from $2.50 per bushel to 70 cents per
bushel over the following years. In addition, English textile mills ceased
buying American cotton in an effort to reduce its inflated price and began to
purchase a lesser quality cotton from India. This sent the price of cotton from
34 ¢ per pound in 1818 to 17 ¢ by 1820, eventually bottoming out at 9 ¢ in 1823.
The impact of these changes was a crushing blow to the booming American
markets.
However, word from abroad traveled
slowly during this time. Americans received all overseas news from port
newspaper reporters interviewing transatlantic passengers debarking ships. Any
information gained was typically further verified by the overseas newspapers
also carried onboard, before being printed in the American papers. In addition,
within the United States, local information was also delayed, as postal letter
and word-of-mouth were the only means of transmission from place to place
before the coming of the telegraph in the 1840s. Tragically, as the markets of
the eastern States were collapsing, the uninformed western planters, farmers,
businessmen, speculators, and commission merchants were still buying goods, cotton
and land at record high prices. On June 12, 1819, the Huntsville Alabama Republican newspaper, reported that in the east
“extraordinary pressures in the mercantile part of that community” had begun
moving west and south “until the whole union [had] become embarrassed by the
failures of mercantile houses and the depreciation of the paper currency.”
Merchants, planters, farmers and
speculators who had bought goods and land on credit, unexpectedly and abruptly became
hopelessly in debt and would have to liquidate all their assets to repay their
creditors. During this time there were no exemption laws, thus all possessions
a person or business owned were subject to be sold to satisfy his debt,
generally causing total ruin to the owner. The creditor, if unsatisfied in his personal
collection efforts, would force collection of the debt through the courts via
lawsuits. However, if still unsuccessful, there was another more dreaded means
of at least partial collection. “Shavers,” made a business of purchasing
delinquent credit notes at a discount, and then forcing full collection, by the
sheriff, who would hold a public auction of some or all of the debtor’s
property needed to satisfy his debt.
For Lewis Shapard, as with most
commission merchants, a common business practice was credit transactions;
whereby, the merchant would purchase goods in advance, extending credit to
their clients who, in turn, promised to pay for those goods at a future date.
When Lewis and his business associates traveled to the markets at New Orleans,
Baltimore and Philadelphia, they would make purchases for their clients at a 10
percent commission above the sale price. They would also make sales at these
markets at the “usual rate.” During the boom, this practice served well,
however, when the Panic of 1819 occurred, Lewis found himself grossly
overextended in purchases, upon which neither he nor his clients could repay.
What ensued was a series of lawsuits over the next few years between those
persons who Lewis owed, and those who owed Lewis.
On May 12, 1819, Lewis Shapard was
summoned to the County Court at Carthage where he appeared before a judge and
acknowledged himself indebted to the State of Tennessee in the sum of $100. The
judgment became void provided that Lewis appeared at the next term of County
Court to “prosecute and give evidence, etc.” It may be deduced that Lewis
failed to appear in court for a case wherein he was the plaintiff.
By June of 1819, Lewis was clearly in
financial trouble and was forced to sell his most valuable servant. On June 8th,
Lewis sold Davey “Dave” for $700 to Osborn Jeffries, Jr., warranting, that Davey
was about 30 years old “sound, sensible and healthy…and free from all claim, or
claims whatsoever…” Interestingly, Davey was born circa 1789, and previously had
been the servant of Lewis’ father-in-law Robert Paine in Person County, North
Carolina. Lewis inherited Davey in 1808, by right of his wife Martha (Paine)
Shapard, and brought him to Tennessee. Mr. Osborn Jeffries, Jr., married Jane
Love Miller in Person County, North Carolina in 1806. They migrated to Smith
County, Tennessee where they raised a family. Mr. Jeffries died in 1821 and
bequeathed to his wife his plantation, as well as, his three slaves, one of
which was named “Dave.”
To illustrate the direness of Lewis’
financial troubles, only a few days earlier, he had become indebted to his
son-in-law Joshua Harrison, on June 1, 1819, in the amount of $375.93. As a
security, Lewis had levied the title of his slave named Davy (not the same slave
sold to Mr. Jefferies), whom he had loaned to Mr. Harrison, to be sold if he
did not make full payment on the debt. By mid-June, Lewis had defaulted on his
payment to Joshua Harrison. Soon after, on June 19, 1819, Mr. Harrison filed a
lawsuit against his father-in-law in Rutherford County. At the hearing, Lewis
did not attend, choosing instead to sending his lawyer to argue the matter. His
lawyer claimed that Mr. Shapard did not attend because he had not been informed
of what damages the plaintiff had sustained. The judge properly informed Lewis’
lawyer of Mr. Harrison’s damages and set a trial to be held at the County Court
at Murfreesboro at the next term of court.
At the trial on September 14, 1819,
the jury found in favor of Mr. Harrison, assessing his damages to $375.95, plus
$6.45 in court costs. By September, Lewis still had not paid his debt, and Mr.
Harrison obtained and Order of Sale whereby the Mathew McClanahan, the Sheriff
of Rutherford County, forced the sale of the slave to satisfy Mr. Shapard’s
debt. The sale was advertised to the public in advance, and the auction
occurred at the Court House in Murfreesboro on December 11, 1819. Joshua
Harrison purchased the slave for $360 as the highest bidder and paid the
Sheriff, whereupon the sheriff returned the money to Mr. Harrison and also
issued to him a bill of sale for the slave. The fact that Mr. Harrison so
desired this slave, lends credence that there was a familiarity with him. It is
highly likely that this was the same slave that Lewis Shapard had loaned to Mr.
Harrison as compensation for tending to the younger Shapard children living at
the Harrison household.
The Panic of 1819 had a grave impact
on Joshua Harrison’s business as a nailer. As England’s factories resurged in
1818, they began producing significant quantities of inexpensive exports that flooded
the American markets. Americans were receptive to these cheaper goods during
the boom, and even more so after the bust when times were financially tough.
However, it effectually crippled local businesses and choked America’s economic
recovery. In 1817, nails made locally in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, by Joshua
Harrison and Robert P. Shapard sold for 25 cents per pound. However, by 1819,
foreign imported nails flooded the Tennessee markets priced at 15 cents per
pound. This made locally produced nails obsolete, ending the nail making
business of Harrison & Co. As it came to pass, Mr. Harrison’s business persevered
and eventually flourished by adapting to the changing times. As his nail making
business declined, he converted his shop into a mercantile store, selling
everything typical of a store during that era.
In the midst of his lawsuit with his
son-in-law in Rutherford County, Lewis Shapard was served with lawsuit in Smith
County. On August 12, 1819, Daniel Cherry sued Lewis Shapard and Don C. Dixon
together for the payment of a $148.75 debt. The jury found in favor of the
plaintiff in the amount of the debt, plus $17.57 ½, plus court costs.
Daniel Cherry (1782-1843) had a
connection to Lewis Shapard through Solomon Paine. Daniel was the son of Jesse
and Elizabeth (Gainer) Cherry of Martin County, North Carolina. Daniel migrated
to Wilson County, Tennessee, and was listed as one of the earliest settlers on
Spring Creek. In 1806, he was selling horses between Tennessee and Martin
County, North Carolina, traveling constantly. Early on, he was heavily involved
in land speculation, purchasing vast amounts of military warrants awarded to
Revolutionary War veterans. By 1821, at the age of 39, he had made a fortune
and owned over 10,000 acres of land in Tennessee. He also engaged in land
surveying, and was employed to survey the business district of St. Louis,
Missouri in the early 1800s. Mr. Cherry moved to Haywood County, Tennessee, in
mid 1820s, and laid out the town of Harrisburg, later renamed Cherryville,
wherein he was the postmaster for a time. Perhaps of interest to Lewis Shapard,
Mr. Cherry had a large fleet of flat bottom boats upon, and was engaged in
shipping along the rivers of Tennessee. In 1810, Daniel Cherry married Sallie
Turner in Smith County Tennessee. Sallie was the daughter of Fredrick Turner,
and the sister of Solomon Paine’s wife Polly (Turner). Interestingly, Daniel
Cherry died in 1843, and left the longest will in Tennessee history.
The other defendant listed with Lewis
Shapard, was Don Carlos Dixon who came from one of the wealthiest, if not the
wealthiest family in Smith County, Tennessee. He was the son of Tilman Dixon
(1750-1816) who migrated to Caswell County, North Carolina. Tillman was a North
Carolina Captain in 1777 during the Revolutionary War, and was taken prisoner
by the British at the siege of Charleston. After the war, Tilman (along with
his brother Charles and nephew Wynn Dixon) migrated to the area of Smith County
Tennessee, where he acquired a massive estate, north of Carthage, he named
“Dixon Springs.” The family mansion was named “Dixona” and had served as the
first courthouse of Smith County. In the early frontier, Dixona was an oasis of
luxury and entertainment, so much so, that it accommodated King Louis Philippe
of France when he was a duke and toured America in 1797. Tilmon Dixon was known
for his fondness of playing cards, and wearing clothing made of deerskins. In
his later years, during the War of 1812, he organized the Capt. T. Dixon’s
Revolutionary Volunteers, which was a collection of Smith County Revolutionary
War veterans that mustered together for drills as a last resort for home
defense. Tilmon Dixon married Maria “Polly” Don Carlos (1757-1806), daughter of
Archelaus Don Carlos, on November 16, 1789. Polly died on August 26, 1806, from
leg cancer at 39 years old. They had four children: Americus V. Dixon, Don C.
Dixon, Polly Greenway Overton (wife of Archie W. Overton), and Elizabeth Henry
Dixon.
Don Carlos Dixon (1792-1841) was a physician
and surgeon of early Tennessee. By the time he met Lewis Shapard, his father
was already deceased, and he and his brother Americus V. Dixon had became the young
heirs to their father’s significant estate of land and slaves. At only 24 years
of age, in 1816, he personally acquired 15 slaves and thousands of acres of
land. In 1819, Dr. Dixon married Elizabeth Harriet Bilbo (1800-1825) of Smith
County; this being his second marriage due to the death of his first wife, Mary
Jouett Allen, in 1815. During the War of 1812, Dr. Dixon was commissioned as a
1st Lieutenant of Infantry, serving from 1812 to 1813. He sold 2,000
acres of land in Smith County, in December of 1821, to Marcus Winchester of
Shelby County. During the 1835 Tennessee General Assembly, Don C. Dixon was nominated
as a candidate to represent Smith County, yet was not elected. He died on
November 22, 1841.
The same day that the above lawsuit
was tried against Lewis Shapard, he, reversed rolls, becoming the plaintiff in
another lawsuit in Smith County, this time against Elijah Anthony. Evidently,
Elijah Anthony was indebted to Archibald W. Overton in the amount of $17.40 and
Lewis Shapard was the security for Mr. Anthony in case of default. During the
trial it was established that when Mr. Anthony failed to pay, Lewis Shapard
fulfilled his obligation as security, paying Mr. Overton what was due. The jury
sided in favor of Lewis Shapard, awarding him $17.40 plus $2.17 in interest and
court costs to be paid by the defendant. Elijah Anthony was the brother of Lewis
Shapard’s friend and possible business associate, William Anthony of Williamson
County, Tennessee. Elijah was born in 1767 in Caswell County and married
Elizabeth Browning in 1796. He migrated to Tennessee, eventuating settling in
Giles County in the 1830s. It may be of interest to note that in 1815,
Archibald W. Overton, Esq., was a Republican candidate to represent the 4th
Congressional District in Congress.
The following month, in September of
1819, Lewis Shapard filed another lawsuit, this time against his former step-son-in-law,
Samuel R. Anderson, husband of Francis “Fanny” Parrish. The hearing was held on
September 30, 1819, and both men arrived at the courthouse in Carthage. Lewis
and Samuel came to a mutual agreement and Lewis dropped the lawsuit, provided
that Mr. Anderson assumed all court costs, which he did. It appears that by
this point during the depression, Samuel R. Anderson was no longer working for
Mr. Shapard.
Shortly after the above lawsuit was
finished, Lewis appeared in Smith County Circuit Court for a lawsuit he filed
against John Patterson, Sr. Both men met
at the courthouse in Carthage on October 2, 1819, for the initial hearing. At
that time, the judge determined that additional testimony was necessary, and
granted the defendant the ability to take the deposition of Charles Donoho,
Frances Weatherhead and John Stewart, all from Sumner County, Tennessee. At the
next hearing of the case on March 28, 1820, the judge allowed Lewis Shapard to
take the deposition of William Sawyer, that same day, at the home of Thomas R.
Short in the town of Carthage. The case was called before a jury two days
later, on March 30, 1820. Apparently, the trial was fairly complex and lengthy,
lasting a few days. On March 31, 1820, the last day of the trial, the jury
heard the final statements and rendered their verdict in favor of the plaintiff
Lewis Shapard, assessing his damages to be $173.18 ¾ plus court costs.
A few months later, Lewis Shapard was
hit with another lawsuit in Smith County, when Elijah Carmen sued Americus V.
Dixon and Lewis Shapard together for the payment of a debt. On May 16, 1820, the
jury rendered a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, and ordered A.V. Dixon and
Lewis Shapard to pay damages to the plaintiff in the hefty amount of $392.25,
plus $21.50 in interest and all court costs. Just after the verdict was read,
Americus V. Dixon made a motion to the court that he had been the surety for
Lewis Shapard. The judge, in turn, made a final ruling between A.V. Dixon vs.
Lewis Shapard, assessing Lewis Shapard with the full amount of the judgment,
totaling the monstrous sum of $413.73, plus court costs to be paid to Mr. Dixon.
Americus Vespucius Dixon (1790-1850)
was the son of Tilman Dixon (1750-1816) and the brother of Dr. Don Carlos Dixon
of Dixon Springs in Smith County, Tennessee. Americus married Lucy P. Jeffries
in Warren County, Tennessee in 1813. In 1816, after his father died, 26 year
old Americus inherited a vast amount of wealth, including 15 slaves, 1,280 acres
of land on the Roaring River in Jackson County and 474 acres along the Stones
River. He also owned lot No. 45 in the town of Carthage, as well as, a saw mill
near Carthage. In 1817, he was elected as the Deputy Sheriff of Smith County,
and in 1819 he had ascended to the title of Sheriff. By 1820, Americus had 19
slaves and thousands of acres of land. Interestingly, in 1837, Smith County
Court audited their books, assessing the viability of unpaid settlements. It
was noted that in the case of A.V. Dixon vs. Lewis Shapard, the defendant Mr.
Shapard did not fully pay, leaving a balance of $1.40. According to the audit,
this balance was deemed “bad” and written off as uncollectable.
In the aftermath of the Panic of 1819,
the court records illustrate the gradual and total devastation of Lewis
Shapard’s business and finances. From 1819 to 1820, Lewis lost one slave and
liquidated another for cash. Between all of the court cases he won $192.75 ¾
and lost up to $1064.45 ½ not including court costs; leaving him financially
deficient by approximately $871.70. It should be noted that the only preserved records
were of lawsuits and legal bills of sales, and did not account for any private
transactions or sales made by Lewis during this time, which would have been
significant. Tragically, his financial situation became so poor that his
business and his residence were permanently abandoned in Smith County, and he dwelled
thereafter, for a time, at the home of Joshua Harrison at Murfreesboro in Rutherford
County, Tennessee.
One benefit of the Panic of 1819 was
that it sparked a significant religious revival across America, known as the
Second Great Awakening. During the summer and fall of 1820, at the exact time
Lewis Shapard left Smith County for Rutherford County, the revival swept the town
of Murfreesboro. At that time, the town was the capital of Tennessee and had
Presbyterian, Cumberland Presbyterian and Baptist churches, yet no organized
Methodist congregation. Realizing the spiritual potential of the town,
Methodist ministers began conducting camp-meetings and revivals, which were
generally held in the late summer and fall after the crops were harvested. They
created such religious excitement in the area that many professed the faith and
Methodism became established there.
While we know Lewis Shapard favored
the Baptist denomination in North Carolina, the records are silent that ascertain
his religious preference whilst in Tennessee. However, two of his sons, Booker
Shapard and Robert Paine Shapard joined the Methodist Church of Murfreesboro, after
attending a revival at Windrow’s Campground in 1820. The revival was held seven
miles southwest of Murfreesboro and lasted for more than a week, attracting an
unusually large audience. The whole while, the attendees remained at the
campground, sleeping outside, eating with neighbors and feeling the excitement
of the revival, in terms of inspirational sermons, lively songs, Christian
brotherhood, prayer, and professions of faith. At the week’s end, 300 members
of the audience became spiritually saved through their profession of faith,
including Booker and Robert Paine Shapard. Shortly thereafter, 19 residents of
the town of Murfreesboro organized the first Methodist church, which carried a
membership of about 30 Christians during the initial years. The early
congregation convened in an unoccupied old house in the evenings and the
courthouse was used on Sundays until they were able to construct a church building
of their own in 1823.
It is significant to note that the
pastor who was first assigned to the congregation at Murfreesboro from October
of 1820 through October of 1822 was Rev. Robert Paine (1799-1882), first cousin
of Booker and Robert Paine Shapard. At that time Rev. Paine was a gifted young
preacher and circuit rider, having just been received into “full-connection” with
the Tennessee Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church in 1820. During his “stripling
term” from 1820 through 1822, he built up and serviced the Methodist
congregations in Murfreesboro (Rutherford County) and Shelbyville (Bedford
County), neither of which initially had a Methodist meeting house. Rev. Robert
Paine would eventually become one of the most well-known, accomplished and
influential Bishops of his era, and was one of the founding members of the
Methodist Episcopal Church South. Thanks to his influence, from 1820 on,
Methodism would become the preferred religious denomination for most of the children
of Lewis Shapard.
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