William Andrew Johnson
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William Andrew Johnson (February 8, 1858 – May 16, 1943) was a lifelong
Tennessean Tennessean refers to someone or something of, from, or related to the state of Tennessee, including: * ''The Tennessean'' newspaper * Tennessean (train) See also * List of people from Tennessee * Tennessine Tennessine is a synthetic chemica ...
who was primarily employed as a restaurant cook. He was described as a "quiet, bright-eyed" man, a "great favorite" in Knoxville, and (per the '' Indianapolis Recorder'' in 1941) he was "regarded by many as the best pastry chef in
East Tennessee East Tennessee is one of the three Grand Divisions of Tennessee defined in state law. Geographically and socioculturally distinct, it comprises approximately the eastern third of the U.S. state of Tennessee. East Tennessee consists of 33 count ...
." William Andrew Johnson was believed to be the last surviving American to have been enslaved by a U.S. president. Johnson, his two sisters Florence and Elizabeth, his mother
Dolly Dolly may refer to: Tools *Dolly (tool), a portable anvil * A posser, also known as a dolly, used for laundering * A variety of wheeled tools, including: **Dolly (trailer), for towing behind a vehicle **Boat dolly or launching dolly, a device fo ...
and his Uncle Sam were all once legally the property of
Andrew Johnson Andrew Johnson (December 29, 1808July 31, 1875) was the 17th president of the United States, serving from 1865 to 1869. He assumed the presidency as he was vice president at the time of the assassination of Abraham Lincoln. Johnson was a Dem ...
, who became the 17th President of the United States following the
assassination of Abraham Lincoln On April 14, 1865, Abraham Lincoln, the 16th president of the United States, was assassinated by well-known stage actor John Wilkes Booth, while attending the play ''Our American Cousin'' at Ford's Theatre in Washington, D.C. Shot in the hea ...
in 1865. In later years, when describing his lifelong relationships with Johnson's children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren, Johnson said "They treat me just like I was one of the family." Local media covered Johnson and his recollections of the late President with some regularity beginning in the 1920s, although the coverage often described Johnson in fairly patronizing terms. William A. Johnson made national headlines in 1937 when he visited the White House at the invitation of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, who gave him a silver-handled cane engraved with both of their names. Meeting Roosevelt one-on-one had been a dream of Johnson's since at least 1934, when he told a local reporter, "I feel like he's one of my kin folks, since I used to stay in the White House, too."


Biography


Early life

William A. Johnson was born at the home of Andrew Johnson in Greeneville, Tennessee in 1858 during the waning days of the Old South. He was born enslaved due to an antebellum American legal principle called '' partus sequitur ventrem'', which meant that since his mother was a slave, he was one, too. He was Dolly Johnson's only son, born roughly a decade after his older sisters Liz and Florence. Per
Jesse J. Holland Jesse James Holland Jr. (born June 28, 1971) is an American journalist, author, television personality and educator.  He was one of the first African American journalists assigned to cover the Supreme Court full-time, and only the second Africa ...
in ''The Invisibles: The Untold Story of African American Slaves in the White House'', this child received two Johnson family names. William was the first name of Andrew Johnson's "beloved brother," and Andrew was, of course, the first name of former Tennessee governor Andrew Johnson, just then the newly elected junior U.S. Senator from Tennessee. In 1932, reporter Bert Vincent quoted Johnson as saying, "Massa named hisself. He called me William Andrew." Andrew Johnson's great-granddaughter Margaret Johnson Patterson stated in 1943 that William Andrew Johnson was the only one of Dolly's children to be born in Greeneville, where Andrew and Eliza Johnson had their family home. & The father of William Andrew Johnson is identified on his death certificate as Andrew Johnson's fourth-born child with Eliza, Robert Johnson. In a 1927 interview, a newspaper account stated that " illiam Johnson'sdearest playmate was a grandson of the president, and no great distinction was made between the two small boys, the white boy claiming as ancestors his grandfather, the chief leader of the nation, and his grandmother the first lady of the land, while the other little boy was a slave, born in bondage, the property of the little white boy's grandfather." The little white boy in question is most likely Andrew Johnson Patterson, born 1857 to
David T. Patterson David Trotter Patterson (February 28, 1818November 3, 1891) was a United States Senator from Tennessee at the beginning of the Reconstruction period. A staunch Union supporter (as were most of his fellow East Tennesseans), he was elected by the ...
and his wife Martha Johnson, oldest daughter of Andrew and Eliza Johnson. One of Andrew Johnson's granddaughters gave William A. Johnson piano lessons at 10 a.m. daily. Eliza McCardle Johnson and Martha Johnson Patterson also helped teach William A. Johnson some of the cooking skills that sustained him in later life. After one of his regular lunches with Andrew Johnson's granddaughter, he told a reporter in 1936: "Her own mammy and her grandmammy, too, taught me how to make pies and chicken dumplings and corn muffins. Miss Johnson sure did like her good cookin' and Miss Patterson did too." In the late 1920s, William Johnson recalled living on Cedar Street in Nashville when Andrew Johnson was military governor of Tennessee amidst the ongoing American Civil War. He told a reporter a story of that era: "He was trying to keep Tennessee in the Union, and as he spoke on the capitol grounds, two shots were fired at him by secessionists. The bullets entered trees near him...My mother had me with her near Marse Andrew when the shots were fired. She took me and ran as fast as she could, not stopping until she got to the basement of the house, which was on Cedar Street." Andrew Johnson is said to have freed his personal slaves on August 8, 1863, although, as William Johnson told it some 70 years later, it was actually Eliza Johnson who broke the news: "Mrs. Johnson called us all in and said we were free now. She said we were free to go or could stay if we wanted to. We all stayed." According to Andrew Johnson's great-granddaughter Margaret Johnson Patterson in 1943, William and his mother Dolly stayed in Tennessee while most of the rest of the family moved to the White House in Washington, D.C. in 1865. According to a 1929 interview with William Johnson, he was living with Andrew Johnson's family in Nashville when Lincoln was assassinated; he recalled how "the missus," Eliza McCardle, was "horror-stricken." Per William Johnson, he ''did'' go to Washington when Johnson was installed in the White House, "There Marse Andrew made me his body servant, and I was with him until he died...When his suits needed pressing he would order me to heat the big flat iron and he would do his pressing. I guess it was the same iron he used to press suits with when he was a tailor in Greeneville...I used to sleep by the door of his bedroom. He would go to bed generally about 9:30, but every night about 12 he would get up and walk the floor for half an hour or more. Seemed like he was thinking. Sometimes he would mutter things out loud. Then he would go back to bed and sleep soundly." Johnson also recalled, "My ol' missus used to make good cakes. Missus Johnson, when she was here in the White House, she go back in the kitchen and do her own danged way." In the late 1930s, Johnson recalled some of his work in service to the Johnsons: Per the younger Johnson, "After he came back from Washington I was with him all the time. I slept right in the same room with him." William A. Johnson "became Andrew Johnson's personal servant—we were together on many trips and I usually slept on a cot in his room when we were away from the home at Greeneville." Andrew Johnson mentioned William Andrew and his sister Elizabeth in the last letter he ever wrote, which was sent to his daughter
Mary Johnson Stover Mary Johnson Stover (May 8, 1832 – April 19, 1883) was a daughter of 17th U.S. President Andrew Johnson and his wife Eliza McCardle. Stover and her three children lived at the White House during the Johnson administration, as Stover's husband ...
ahead of a visit to her house in Carter County, Tennessee: "William is very anxious to come and perhaps I may bring him as he is...desirous to see Liz and the children." William A. Johnson stayed in Andrew Johnson's room after the former president and recently elected U.S. Senator suffered a stroke at his daughter Mary Johnson Stover Brown's home in 1875. William Andrew Johnson was with Johnson through his final illness, hardly sleeping over the course of the former President's decline, and was with him when he died. A contemporary neurologist credits William with astute observation skills and his clinically valuable description of Johnson experiencing "one of the earliest known cases" of the medical condition asomatognosia. Neither William A. Johnson, nor Liz and her children (who were also likely present in the home) were mentioned in newspaper accounts of Johnson's final hours, which otherwise listed the presence of three doctors, Eliza, Martha, Mary, Mary's three children, and Frank. In 1881, a visitor to Greeneville reported that "some colored people" were living in the old Andrew Johnson tailor shop and were taking good care of the building; this is likely William and his mother Dolly. In the 20th century a Greeneville newspaper stated, "Older citizens will remember the elaborately decorated and delicious cakes that occupied the place of honor at the big parties which the late Col. and Mrs. J. H. Doughty gave, which were baked by William Johnson." The death date of Johnson's mother, Dolly Johnson, is unknown, but the National Park Service (which administers the Andrew Johnson National Historic Site in Greeneville) estimates that she died between 1890 and 1892. Her children seem to have all departed Greeneville for Knoxville after her death; in 1891, there is an entry in the Knoxville city directory for ''Johnson, Wm, c, pastry cook Hotel Hattie''.


Turn of the century

In the early 1900s, Johnson worked baking cakes and pies at a Tennessee business called Hattie House. Later in life he recalled that U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt stayed at the Cumberland Hotel when he visited East Tennessee. In 1910 he was living in the household of his sister Florence Johnson Smith and his niece Mabel Smith at the corner of McGhee and Dora in Knoxville and working as a cook at a hotel."United States Census, 1910," database with images, ''FamilySearch'' (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MGF3-BRV : accessed 25 June 2023), Florence Smith, Knoxville Ward 9, Knox, Tennessee, United States; citing enumeration district (ED) ED 93, sheet 7B, family 111, NARA microfilm publication T624 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1982), roll 1507; FHL microfilm 1,375,520.


1920s

William A. Johnson never married. The last member of immediate family, his older sister Florence Johnson Smith, died in 1920. Beginning in the 1920s, William A. Johnson became a minor celebrity in East Tennessee. He lived at 325 Douglas Street in Knoxville, and was interviewed a number of times for newspaper articles and radio programs. He was sometimes included in events commemorating Andrew Johnson. For instance, in 1923 he was present for a ceremony in which Andrew Johnson's descendants donated the President's "old tailor shop" building to the state of Tennessee. Similarly, in 1925 a Nashville paper reported that William A. Johnson was to appear at a Memorial Day celebration at Rutledge, Tennessee, along with former Tennessee governor Alf A. Taylor. After the fact a Knoxville newspaper reported that a Congressman attended, that the old Johnson Tailor Shop building was celebrated, and that "A silver dollar hatbelonged to President Johnson was on exhibition. His slave was introduced to the audience and spoke briefly." A couple of days later the same paper reported, "The stage was decorated with cut flowers, and on a table belonging to Andrew Johnson there was a huge cake, baked by William Andrew Johnson, a slave of President Johnson, the cake being donated by Andrew Johnson Patterson, a grandson of Andrew Johnson." In 1927, Johnson was hired as the cook at the Rutledge Inn in Rutledge, Tennessee, and spoke to a newspaper about his history with Andrew Johnson, about whom he spoke with "tender regard." There was another burst of publicity centered on William A. Johnson in 1929, when was he was hired to be a doorman at Knoxville's
Andrew Johnson Hotel The Andrew Johnson Building is a high-rise building in downtown Knoxville, Tennessee, United States. Completed in 1929 as the Andrew Johnson Hotel, at , it was Knoxville's tallest building for nearly a half-century.Ronald Childress, National Regi ...
. A reporter from the '' Columbia Record'' of Columbia, South Carolina visited the hotel and recorded some of Johnson's reminiscences: During another interview that year he recalled that Andrew Johnson once traveled overseas and visited Napoleon's redoubt at St. Helena. The elder Johnson brought back cuttings of willows growing on the island that he planted at the house in Greeneville. Around Christmastime 1929, William A. Johnson solved the "case of the stolen drapes" at the Andrew Johnson Hotel when he noticed a woman leaving with curtain fabric hanging out of the back of her suitcase. The assistant manager chased her down and found she was also carrying towels, a coffee pot, and spoons from other regional hotels.


1930s

By fall 1930, Johnson had left his job as a doorman and returned to cooking and baking; he prepared 5,000 donuts for the grand opening of a 24-hour coffee shop on Union Avenue, which was run by Herbert Weaver and Harry O'Neil. Johnson worked every day but Sunday from about 5 a.m. to 1 p.m. "or when I get my pies and pastries baked." Herbert Weaver and his wife Frances (Curtis) Weaver were Johnson's friends and often helped him with transportation and advocated for him. Apparently at some point early in the
Great Depression The Great Depression (19291939) was an economic shock that impacted most countries across the world. It was a period of economic depression that became evident after a major fall in stock prices in the United States. The economic contagio ...
, "it looked as if William would have to go the poorhouse" but upon hearing this news, Mrs. Weaver "threw a fit." Per Johnson's telling, she said, "Do you think I'd ever let that old man go to the poorhouse? William needn't worry about the poorhouse as long as I'm here." Johnson also worked at one point for Mr. and Mrs. Frank Weaver (Frank and Herbert being brothers), who owned a separate restaurant on Knoxville's main commercial thoroughfare, Gay Street. In 1934, Herbert Weaver told the ''
Knoxville News-Sentinel The ''Knoxville News Sentinel, also known as Knox News,'' is a daily newspaper in Knoxville, Tennessee, United States, owned by the Gannett Company. History The newspaper was formed in 1926 from the merger of two competing newspapers: ''The ...
'' that he hoped local Democratic leaders would cooperate with him in devising a plan to introduce William A. Johnson to Franklin D. Roosevelt. Roosevelt visited East Tennessee on November 17, 1934, to promote the Tennessee Valley Authority projects of his
New Deal The New Deal was a series of programs, public work projects, financial reforms, and regulations enacted by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in the United States between 1933 and 1939. Major federal programs agencies included the Civilian Cons ...
program, specifically the Norris Dam. However, the 1934 introduction did not occur and the paper published a photo of a forlorn-looking Johnson with a "WELCOME" ribbon pinned to his jacket. Two years later, in 1936, William Andrew Johnson and Johnson's great-granddaughter Margaret Johnson Patterson were guests on a WNOX radio program called ''Strolling in East Tennessee'' with Bert Vincent. The program notes for the episode state: "A dramatic sketch presented a slave auction of early days, and later portrayed President Johnson on his deathbed, still accompanied by the faithful William Andrew. The old former slave now works in a Knoxville restaurant."


1937: Ernie Pyle, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, and national radio

In 1937, nationally syndicated Scripps Howard newspaper columnist Ernie Pyle visited Knoxville on his "rambling reporter" tour of America. He and local columnist Bert Vincent interviewed each other, and Vincent introduced Pyle to William A. Johnson. The two "sat in the back of a Knoxville restaurant" and had a long conversation about Johnson's work, his family, and his lifelong connection to the Andrew Johnson family. Pyle's interview with Johnson, originally datelined February 3, 1937, has become an oft-cited 20th-century source on the later life of President A. Johnson and on his personal ownership of slaves before the Civil War and Emancipation. They discussed Johnson's childhood memories of the elder Johnson"Mr. Andrew Johnson would hold me on one knee and my sister on the other, and he'd rub our heads and laugh"and how William Andrew nursed Andrew Johnson for the final six days of his life, as he suffered from a series of debilitating and ultimately fatal strokes, as well as the younger Johnson's disappointment at not getting to meet Franklin D. Roosevelt on his trip to Norris Dam. Pyle's column likely caught the attention of White House Press Secretary Stephen Early, who thought it might be a
human-interest story In journalism Journalism is the production and distribution of reports on the interaction of events, facts, ideas, and people that are the "news of the day" and that informs society to at least some degree. The word, a noun, applies to the occ ...
that could generate positive publicity for Roosevelt. Early arranged for William Andrew Johnson to travel to Washington, D.C., to visit Roosevelt at the White House, and then "leaked" the meeting to the press. An
U.S. Secret Service The United States Secret Service (USSS or Secret Service) is a federal law enforcement agency under the Department of Homeland Security charged with conducting criminal investigations and protecting U.S. political leaders, their families, and ...
man (alternately described as a " G-man from Louisville, Kentucky") was sent to chaperone him and the two traveled by train to D.C. & "You know, my folks used to live here," Johnson told a Knoxville reporter tagging along. Roosevelt conversed with Johnson for half an hour in the
Oval Office The Oval Office is the formal working space of the President of the United States. Part of the Executive Office of the President of the United States, it is located in the West Wing of the White House, in Washington, D.C. The oval-shaped room ...
and/or the Red Room. Per Johnson, "He wanted to know all about my white folks—that was President Johnson and his family. I brought him all the pictures I had of Mr. Johnson, and his granddaughter Mrs. Margaret Patterson, and my sister, who was a slave in his family, too." At the end of the meeting, Roosevelt presented Johnson with a silver-handled cane engraved with both their names. Johnson was then taken on a Secret Service-chaperoned tour of the U.S. Capitol, where he was introduced to Vice President
John Nance Garner John Nance Garner III (November 22, 1868 – November 7, 1967), known among his contemporaries as "Cactus Jack", was an American History of the Democratic Party (United States), Democratic politician and lawyer from History of Texas, Texas who ...
, the Washington Monument, the
Lincoln Memorial The Lincoln Memorial is a U.S. national memorial built to honor the 16th president of the United States, Abraham Lincoln. It is on the western end of the National Mall in Washington, D.C., across from the Washington Monument, and is in the ...
, Arlington National Cemetery (including the
Tomb of the Unknown Soldier A Tomb of the Unknown Soldier or Tomb of the Unknown Warrior is a monument dedicated to the services of an unknown soldier and to the common memories of all soldiers killed in war. Such tombs can be found in many nations and are usually high-prof ...
), and Mount Vernon. He may have also been interviewed for the radio. Johnson called the visit with FDR and the trip generally "the finest thing that's ever happened." Later in the year Johnson told a reporter, "When I called on Mr. Roosevelt in Washington I hadn't been to the White House in 62 years. I told Mr. Roosevelt that his makeup was more like President Johnson's than any man I had ever seen. They were both grand men, and they both talked so nice and grand to me." Pyle said his role in prompting the meeting was the "happiest I've ever inadvertently made anybody." Johnson wrote thank you notes to Roosevelt and Pyle after the meeting. Bert Vincent reported that Johnson hoped the visit prestaged better relations between "white folks and colored folks" in the
American South The Southern United States (sometimes Dixie, also referred to as the Southern States, the American South, the Southland, or simply the South) is a geographic and cultural region of the United States of America. It is between the Atlantic Ocean ...
. The week after Johnson's visit to D.C., Mrs. Herbert Weaver drove Johnson to Greeneville to visit Mrs. Andrew J. Patterson, Andrew Johnson's granddaughter-in-law and the wife of his childhood companion, and her daughter Mattie Patterson. The visit made the front page of the '' Greeneville Sun'' newspaper. In March, Johnson allowed his Roosevelt cane to be used as a prop in a school play. In early December 1937, U.S. Senator
George L. Berry George Leonard Berry (September 12, 1882December 4, 1948) was president of the International Printing Pressmen and Assistants' Union of North America from 1907 to 1948 and a Democratic United States Senator from Tennessee from 1937 to 1938. E ...
submitted legislation to provide Johnson with a a month federal pension. Berry's legislation likely did not pass as six years later U.S. Senator Kenneth McKellar requested the same, at which time Johnson was said to be in the "alms house." Johnson was invited to be a guest on Gabriel Heatter's ''
We the People The Preamble to the United States Constitution, beginning with the words We the People, is a brief introductory statement of the Constitution's fundamental purposes and guiding principles. Courts have referred to it as reliable evidence o ...
'' radio show on the CBS network between Christmas and New Year's. Producers paid travel expenses for Johnson and a companion (termed a "guardian" by the newspaper), as well as a per diem for both. Johnson was accompanied to New York by Mrs. Herbert Weaver; Johnson was still working as a pastry chef at Weaver's Grill on Union Avenue. The trip was said be Johnson's second out-of-state travel since the American Reconstruction era, the first being his trip to D.C. to visit with Roosevelt. While in New York, Johnson visited the headquarters of the
NAACP The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) is a civil rights organization in the United States, formed in 1909 as an interracial endeavor to advance justice for African Americans by a group including W. E.&nb ...
and was interviewed by the United Press. He said that despite his age, "I feel good because I never lived a rowdy life. I've smoked in late years and I take a toddy now and then, but I don't overdo either." Johnson's guest stint on the ''We the People'' radio program could be heard in Knoxville via " WBT 1080 kilocycles or WHAS 810 kilocycles," broadcasters out of Charlotte, North Carolina, and Louisville, Kentucky, respectively. At the time the December 30, 1937 episode aired from 6:30 to 7 p.m. on the Columbia Broadcasting System radio network, William Andrew Johnson was the only Knoxvillian who had ever been interviewed on ''We the People''.


Later years

The following year, 1938, Johnson spoke at a Tennessee Emancipation Day celebration at
Chilhowee Park Chilhowee Park is a public park, fairgrounds and exhibition venue in Knoxville, Tennessee, United States, located off Magnolia Avenue in East Knoxville. Developed in the late 19th century, the park is home to the Tennessee Valley Fair and hosts se ...
. In 1941, Bert Vincent used his "Strolling" column in the ''Knoxville News-Sentinel'' as a platform to request a wheelchair for the aging and ailing Johnson; Johnson suffered leg pain and could no longer walk. The Knoxville Red Cross came through. William A. Johnson, age 85, died at 2 p.m. on May 16, 1943, at the George Maloney Home, a facility for the indigent aged in Knoxville, Tennessee. According to the home superintendent, Johnson had been ailing for quite a while before he died. After his death, Margaret Johnson Patterson, a great-granddaughter of Andrew Johnson, told the ''
Knoxville Journal ''The Knoxville Journal'' was a daily newspaper published in Knoxville, Tennessee, United States, between 1886 and 1991. It operated first as a morning and then as an afternoon publication. On December 31, 1991, its last owner, the Persis Corp ...
'' a bit about the family's view of Johnson:


FDR cane and scrapbook

In 2011, local historians examining Tennessee's unique
Emancipation Day Emancipation Day is observed in many former European colonies in the Caribbean and areas of the United States on various dates to commemorate the emancipation of slaves of African descent. On August 1, 1985, Trinidad and Tobago became the fir ...
traditions began researching the topic of
Andrew Johnson and slavery Andrew Johnson, who became the 17th U.S. president following the assassination of Abraham Lincoln, was one of the last U.S. Presidents to personally own slaves. Johnson also oversaw the first years of the Reconstruction era as the head of the e ...
. Researcher Randi Nott encountered Andrew Johnson Presidential Museum and Library at
Tusculum College Tusculum University is a private Presbyterian university with its main campus in Tusculum, Tennessee. It is Tennessee's first university and the 28th-oldest operating college in the United States. In addition to its main campus, the institution ...
archivist Kathy Cuff at a conference, and after discussing the life history of William A. Johnson, Cuff found that William A. Johnson's scrapbook was hidden away, uninventoried, in their collection. Meanwhile, amateur Knoxville historian Bill Murrah worked on the family tree of Sam Johnson. Sam Johnson was William A. Johnson's uncle, and is often credited with initiating the August 8 celebration of Emancipation in Tennessee. Murrah eventually connected by telephone with a man in Louisville, Kentucky, named Ned Arter, who was one of Sam Johnson's great-great-grandsons. Arter had no idea of his family's connection to U.S. President Andrew Johnson. He did, however, have a mysterious artefact stored away in his closet: a silver-handled cane engraved with the names Franklin D. Roosevelt and William A. Johnson. Arter was a featured speaker at the Andrew Johnson National Historic Site commemoration of Tennessee's Emancipation Day on August 8, 2012. Arter brought the cane with him to the presentation. Circa 2011 there were plans to publish William Andrew Johnson's scrapbook online via the Digital Library of Appalachia.


See also

* " I, Too" (1927 poem by Langston Hughes) *
Reparations for slavery in the United States Reparations for slavery is the application of the concept of reparations to victims of slavery or their descendants. There are concepts for reparations in legal philosophy and reparations in transitional justice. In the US, reparations for sla ...
* List of last survivors of American slavery * Presidency of Franklin D. Roosevelt, first and second terms * List of presidents of the United States who owned slaves *
List of vice presidents of the United States who owned slaves This is a list of vice presidents of the United States who owned slaves. Slavery was legal in the United States from its beginning as a nation, having been practiced in North America since early colonial days. The Thirteenth Amendment of the Un ...
*
List of children of presidents of the United States The following people are children of U.S. presidents, including stepchildren and alleged illegitimate children. All full names with married names are given except for Theodore Roosevelt III and Herbert Charles Hoover. Currently there are 33 co ...
* * Bibliography of Andrew Johnson


Explanatory notes


References


External links

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Johnson, William Andrew 1858 births 1943 deaths African-American history of Tennessee Pastry chefs People from East Tennessee People who were enslaved by Andrew Johnson Burials in Tennessee People from Greeneville, Tennessee People from Knoxville, Tennessee 19th-century American slaves History of slavery in Tennessee