Visual Arts
music
Live Theatre
Willow Oak Center for Arts and Learning
My Perfect RobCo Day: The Arts
Type “Homer Worsham Rd” into your favorite Maps app and follow the little blue line to capture some of the most beautiful sunrise photos as the fog rises above the barns. Take your time and drive slowly, these hills will take your breath away.
After you fill your memory card with sunrise snaps, head on over to Cross Plains and grab a sausage biscuit and a steaming cup of coffee from neighborhood favorite, Terry’s Market.
Head west to Historic Downtown Springfield for the RobCo Farmer’s Market. Meet Grain and Honey Bake Shop, and be sure to grab a loaf of their signature sourdough! Walk to 7th St, and get your photo taken in front of the RobCo mural.
WHITE HOUSE PIZZA + PUB
MURPH'S COUNTRY MUSIC BARN
BINK'S BAR + GRILL
THE CAPITOL THEAtRE
Just as the earthen, spicy aroma of the dark fired tobacco smoke fills the Robertson County air, the greatest story tellers from the area gather for The Red River Tales.
From the heart of The Black Patch arises hauntings, heroes, the heart of the south. Discover the history as rich as the land from which it was born, and explore the stories and melodies from the hills and hollers of Tennessee. Join us for an afternoon of FREE music and history to kick off the Bell Witch Fall Festival.
Each Fall since 2002, David Alford’s play, Spirit: The Authentic History of the Bell Witch of Tennessee, has been produced on the grounds of the Bell School in Adams, the very land settled by John Bell and where the hauntings took place. As the play says, “In this place, on this ground” — only yards from the graves of the Bell family. The play is performed by professional actors from Nashville as well as local talent.
SPIRIT is based on Richard Williams Bell’s memoir entitled Our Family Trouble. Richard Williams Bell’s memoir is the only known eyewitness account of the Bell Witch hauntings, which took place between 1818 and 1820 in the Bell home in Adams. Ingram honored the Bell family’s request that the account not be published until after all of John Bell Sr.’s immediate family had passed away.