TENNESSEE HISTORY Classroom
FULL HISTORY STORIES


The Murder of Meriwether Lewis


The Natchez Trace National Parkway in middle Tennessee is a patchwork of level wooded forests and rolling plains that attracts hundreds of thousands of tourists to the state each year to drive along one of the nation’s oldest and most colorful highways.
Like most American roads in the early frontier, the Parkway began as an ancient Indian trail, which was widened through the years by colonists and travelers using the overland routes to the Mississippi River.
In 1803, then-President Thomas Jefferson, who saw the value of an overland route in the southeastern interior, allocated funds and soldiers to develop the highway. The appropriate deals were made with the Chickasaw Nation and it was widened it to accommodate wagons and heavy carts.
The highway soon became one of the most dangerous and notorious in America. Rogue Indians and outlaws would often raid or kill travelers and many who took the Natchez Trace were never heard from again and the outlaws, who preyed upon travelers, would rise to fame in American criminal history for their brutality and viciousness.
One particular place of interest on the Tennessee Parkway is a small cabin near Hohenwald, TN. Here an incident took place that remains unexplained and the investigation is still considered open by the federal courts – a case that involves one of the nation’s first native heroes and a man, who’s life, historians say, can only be described as an enigma.



Meriwether Lewis was born on Aug. 18, 1774 near Charlottesville, VA He spent his youth in Oglethorpe, Ga., where he became a proficient outdoorsman and learned from the Native American tribes in the region. Lewis returned to Virginia for his education, but family finances forced him to leave his studies and, like most young men of his era, pursue a career in the military.
At age 20, he enlisted in the troops called up by President George Washington to help put down the Whiskey Rebellion. Lewis proved to be such a valuable asset to the troops and volunteered into the Regular Army. During his enlistment, he renewed a childhood friendship with fellow officer Thomas Jefferson. The two became extremely close and endured much in the often under-funded Continental Army.
When Jefferson was elected President in 1801, he quickly chose Lewis as his personal secretary. He lived at the White House and served the President in a variety of matters of national importance, including the Louisiana Purchase.
In 1803, Congress approved an exploration for the first overland route to the Pacific Ocean. President Jefferson, who felt his friend was growing bored with his position, placed Lewis in charge of organizing the expedition. As preparations began, Capt. Lewis chose former Army colleague Capt. William Clark to accompany him on the journey west and the two would forge a partnership that would capture the American imagination. It took more than a year to get everything together and the team assembled for the undertaking. A couple of times it looked as if the trek would never begin, but perseverance on the part of Lewis and Jefferson finally brought everything together.
On May 14, 1804, the expedition left St. Louis, Mo. with marching orders to cross the vastly unexplored American region and find a route to the Pacific Ocean. The rivers, which were believed to offer a navigable way west, did not provide the water route to the Pacific. Lewis and Clark’s men had to adapt to the changing country and found the vastness of it unbelievable. It was not, they soon discovered, going to be an easy trek. The crew faced unbelievable hardships in what would become a two-and-a-half year journey through the wilderness of western North America. They lived off the land and stayed focused on their mission in spite of everything mapping all they could on the journey.
When Lewis and Clark returned to St. Louis on Sept. 23, 1806, city residents were shocked at first, but then wildly welcomed the returning crew to the city. Many, including President Jefferson, had believed Lewis and Clark’s team to have died on the journey and had given them up for dead. Lewis, Clark, and the remaining members of the expedition soon left St. Louis and traveled to Washington, D.C., where they filed their official reports.
Lewis was credited with holding the group together against unbelievable odds and surviving the quest. His fellow team members gave descriptions of the country that bordered on unbelievable for the geologists and scientists of the day. Lewis, however, had kept remarkable journals and, from these, American cartographers got their first view of the western frontier. The fame that was thrust upon Lewis and Clark was both intoxicating and intimidating to them. The party’s journey into the exotic wilderness of North America was written about in newspapers throughout the nation and Europe.
While Captain William Clark rejoined his command and assumed a military post, Meriwether Lewis found himself coming to terms with being America’s first major celebrity since the Revolutionary War. Lewis, who was given to dark moods, soon resigned his commission from the Army and took an appointment from Jefferson to become Governor of the Louisiana Territory. As it is in any era, the fame had its downside in that it created enemies for Lewis and President Jefferson’s political foes saw a way to get at the President through Lewis.
After three years as Governor of the Louisiana Territory, some questions were raised concerning Lewis’ financial accounts that offended his sense of honor. Even though Lewis knew that political intrigue was behind the accusations. It added to Lewis’ feeling that he was cut off from the mainstream of Washington culture and hated to have to depend on President Jefferson and his other friends to defend his honor. After thinking on it for a while, Gov. Lewis decided to travel to the Capitol and clear his name.
In 1809, Lewis and a party of men crossed the Mississippi River and marched to the Natchez Trace in Tennessee. Although notoriously dangerous, the party of men accompanying Lewis was believed to be able to provide ample security for the Governor. Lewis had packed papers, money and other things that he needed, which were carried by pack mules on the journey.
The men moved at a steady pace and eventually came to a point on the Natchez Trace where they were going to turn north to get to Nashville. The trip was uneventful to that time and noting had been encountered to cause them worry. Lewis and his company finally arrived at a place called Grinder’s Inn near Hohenwald. Nashville was still a good distance away and the party decided to stop for the night rather than risk a night march that could have attracted trouble. The Inn Lewis stopped at wasn’t much, but it, at least, afforded him a roof over his head and a plane to camp his men. Mrs. Grinder had graciously received her guests. Cash money was hard to come by and she welcomed the opportunity. Her husband was nowhere to be seen and she reportedly told one of the party members that he was off hunting. Satisfied that everything was secure, Lewis unpacked and prepared for a night’s sleep.
Around 3 a.m. the morning of Oct. 11, 1809, the silence of the night was torn apart by two shots that were believed to have come from the vicinity of Lewis’ cabin. They heard cries for help that soon became unbearable to the occupants of the cabin. Mrs. Grinder supposedly summoned a servant and went to investigate the noise. They found the famous explorer lying in his bed bleeding heavily and hovering near death. A quick look at the wounds showed he had been stabbed and shot twice. No one was near by or reportedly had witnessed anyone near the cabin. The loss of blood and the wounds were too much for Lewis and he died within hours of the incident. He was rather hastily buried in a cemetery plot next to Grinder’s Inn off of the Natchez Trace.
When news of Lewis’ violent death reached Washington, the men in Lewis’ party were intensely questioned about the incident, but none knew what had happened up to the time he was discovered bleeding in the cabin. Authorities then questioned Mrs. Grinder and her servant about the incident and discovered there was something not right with their explanations. Both were telling differing stories that called their character into question. While one story told that the pair had found Lewis in that condition, Mrs. Grinder had also told a federal investigator "they had found Lewis alive with bullet wounds to his head and chest and the explorer busily engaged in cutting himself from head to foot with a razor."
Because of the quick burial and the lack of forensic knowledge in those days the official cause of death was questionable and listed as unknown.
When the reports of the incident were filed in the District of Columbia and the summation concluded suicide as an explanation. Lewis’ colleagues became enraged, called them lies and immediately contested their credibility. For the report to have played out like it was delivered, Lewis would have had to shoot himself in the chest with a single-shot black powder pistol, gone through the tedious process of loading it, shoot himself again in the head, and then pick up a razor and start mutilating himself, while bleeding from already mortal wounds and crying out for help. Not only did it seem humanly impossible to do, but, had he actually committed suicide, Gov. Lewis’ knowledge of firearms and military experience meant he would have been much more efficient at it.
Lewis’ supporters argued that not much was known about Mrs. Grinder and her husband, who was supposedly absent the entire time Lewis’ party was camped at the Inn. It also didn’t make sense to them that on a highway as infamous as the Natchez Trace, Grinder would leave his wife alone at night where any outlaw or Indian party could attack. In any event, numerous personal items of Lewis’ were missing, including a reported trunk that was believed to be carrying money and personal papers, which also contained his memoirs that were to be published and documents that would have exonerated him from the charges in Washington. The incident was more than suspicious to Lewis’ supporters and they refused to believe he killed himself.
President Jefferson said very little about the results of the investigation, but had on occasion related that Lewis suffered from a type of "hypochondria" and was given to "black moods". The questions surrounding his death, however, remained and the mystery of what happened that night at Grinder’s Inn quickly slipped into the history books unanswered.
Almost immediately following his death, strange occurrences began happening at Grinder’s Inn. Doors on the cabin where Lewis died would open and slam in the middle of the night, a man would be seen at the well, but suddenly disappear when approached. People also reported seeing an unexplained light near the grave of the explorer and travelers often stated they felt an uneasy presence at the sight and would move on in the dark of night on a dangerous road rather than stay at the Inn. Even the Indians and outlaws, who earned notorious reputations for their exploits against travelers, feared the site and would go out of their way to avoid it and the strange voices that emanated from the grounds seeming to call for help that people would answer only to find no one there.
No one ever heard anything from the Inn’s former owners. Former because the Grinders had somehow seen a "sudden change in their fortunes" and moved to west Tennessee where they bought a large farm and many slaves. No one knew where this sudden wealth came from nor asked and the two simply passed into oblivion to never be heard from again.
Although the suicide theory held up for many years, later occurrences called it into question. Reports allege that the explorer’s gold watch mysterious surfaced in Louisiana and around 20 years later a trunk containing the personal papers and memoirs of Meriwether Lewis was anonymously delivered to his relatives. There was no return address or anything that would point to who had sent it.
Those in the Gordonsburg and Hohenwald communities protected the grave of America’s most famous explorer over the years. In the 1920s, the U.S. Congress made the Natchez Trace Parkway into a National Park. During this time, the Tennessee Legislature had the body of Lewis exhumed and made a positive identification of it by using descriptions of the wounds in the investigators’ reports filed in 1810 in D.C. After more than 110 years, experts were able to match the body being examined with the reports that were file. They reinterred the body of Meriwether Lewis in the Grinder’s site, concreted over the grave to protect it from looters, and erected a rounded granite pillar to mark the place where the explorer had fallen. The Grinder cabin was eventually restored by the National Park and tourists can today see where one of the nation’s greatest mysteries took place.
*********
Beginning in 2003, the United States is expected to hold activities, ceremonies and events commemorating the bicentennial of the Lewis and Clark Expedition. As to the demise of the famed explorer in Tennessee, experts have recently been investigating that October night in 1809 and continue to draw differing conclusions. Medical authorities have said through the years that the conditions described by President Jefferson could indicate Lewis may have suffered from manic depression and may have been prone to suicidal tendencies.
In making the case for suicide, historians studying the case later suggested Lewis could have killed himself because he was mentally ill, suffering from syphilis, or was a drug addict, which was not uncommon in those day, but very little proof has been provided to back up the claims. Other scholars believe those are easy answers and still hold to the theory that the explorer was murdered. Many investigative experts from 1809 to today continuously assert the evidence tends to support that theory and the Grinders knew far more than they ever told authorities. There was little, if no, evidence that could have supported a case against the Grinders in court and suppositions based upon what was told to authorities was the only way any conclusions could have been made about the incident.
Since that night, visitors to the place where Lewis lost his life have reported strange occurrences and events, which have also earned Grinder’s Inn a reputation as a "haunted house" and has become a part of the local folklore, especially around Halloween. Government officials say the strange occurrences can be easily explained and frown upon the visits by so-called "paranormal experts," who wish to study the site. Officials attribute the strange sounds to the wind and trees or active imaginations. The stories, however, continue to endure all these generations late. The Inn and the "haunting" have been featured in numerous publications and broadcast programs.
Meriwether Lewis wasn’t the only member of the famous expedition to be buried in Tennessee. The other veteran of the Expedition to find his way to Tennessee was an individual, who was a former slave known as "York Clark." He was owned by Capt. William Clark and accompanied him on his westward mission where he surprised the expedition by becoming a vital part of the famous trek. Western Indian tribes had never seen a black man and were fascinated with him. York proved to be a skillful negotiator and helped the expedition on many occasions with the sometimes-hostile Native American tribes. He often fascinated the tribal leaders with his feats of strength and agility and most wanted to touch him to see if his color was permanent. In fact, York proved such an asset to the crew that Clark gave him his freedom when they returned for his service on the Expedition. After a short time with Clark, York moved to a free Black colony in Tennessee where he later died during a cholera epidemic that swept the village. The Lewis and Clark Expedition is getting more recognition these days from historians and archaeologists, who are in the process of locating all of the campsites of the expedition across America and marking them.
In 1996, the mystery of what happened to Meriwether Lewis became the center of a national controversy again when James Starr, a George Washington University law professor and forensic expert, started a movement to exhume the body of Lewis to try and determine once and for all if the explorer was murdered or, in fact, killed himself.
Starr got the support of Tennessee Congressman Bob Clement and other leaders to approach the National Park Service to get the permits necessary to exhume the body. Starr had been previously successful in using modern techniques to prove the identity of the body of outlaw Jesse James and believes he can answer the questions surrounding Lewis’ death with the same methods.
Lewis County District Attorney Joe Baugh presented the case to a coroner’s jury and won their request to exhume the body. The organized effort got Secretary of the Interior Bruce Babbitt to support the investigation and he was expected to lobby the National Park Service to allow it. In addition, Starr began a search for Lewis’ descendants and mailed over 170 letters to locate next of kin for permission.
While some park officials support the exhumation, The NPS’s official stance has maintained that the bones of Meriwether Lewis are over 100 years old and on Federal land, making them an archaeological resource that should not be tampered with by anyone.
Upon getting the information needed, however, Starr presented his case to U.S. District Judge Thomas Higgins in Nashville. Judge Higgins ruled that law, not history, would decided on the exhumation. Judge Higgins stated:
"While the court appreciates the interest of the family members and academic interests of these other gentlemen, these are not the driving forces."
Higgins went on to say he must decide whether the government brought the case to a federal court in time. If it is proven they did, then the question is whether or not a Lewis County prosecutor must pursue exhuming the body only through the Park Service.
If Starr is successful in getting the body of Meriwether Lewis exhumed, he would test Lewis’ hair for evidence of substance abuse and his bones to see if bullet-hole angles conform to those of self-inflicted wounds.
That is where the case stands and NPS officials are still determined that his body will not be disturbed again. Meriwether Lewis was a man whose impact on post-revolutionary America is hard to explain in today’s terms. His sacrifice and efforts gave a young nation the vision to extend its boundaries to the west coast and proved Americans were capable of accomplishing what was then believed to be impossible.
Grinder’s Inn off of the Natchez Trace Parkway is a beautiful place worth seeing. There are other graves located in the cemetery where Lewis’ monument stands, but perhaps none so lonely as his or as commanding of attention from visitors. Most visitors to the site are surprised to find such a prominent American’s grave in such an out-of-the-way.