The Legend of Smyrna’s Monkey Woman Bridge
By Mike Sparks
This story is dedicated to the life and legacy of the late Sally Walls. Thank you, Sally, for the memories, encouragement, caring spirit for others, your vision, and for being a trailblazer in Tennessee law enforcement.
When I was a young boy, I would often ride along with Sally Walls, former Smyrna police chief and the first female chief in the department’s history. She was my neighbor—I grew up right next door to her—and I considered her a mentor. I was close friends with her son Lonnie, and everyone who knew Lonnie understood that he was wild as a buck, and that’s putting it mildly. But it was Sally who truly shaped my understanding of our community.
We would often drive over the current bridge where the former Monkey Woman Bridge was roughly located. She would tell us the old tale—which would place a scare in us boys.
Many may recall the old tree lined canopy over the old road which went near the old graveyard, that I think, dates back to the early 1700s.
Sally would often take a few local kids swimming at the old Smyrna Country Club that she and Major James Walls owned, along with their famous Omni Hut restaurant—a place that would become deeply meaningful to me when I started working there at thirteen for $1.50 an hour.
Many days I’d walk to work when I couldn’t catch a ride with Major Walls. During our rides together, Sally would share local stories and tales about our community’s past—weaving narratives that seemed to bring the very landmarks to life.
Among all these stories, one would become Smyrna’s most enduring and chilling legend: the story of Monkey Woman Bridge.
Many stories circulated around town describing haunted buildings, landmarks and cemeteries that depicted spirits, ghosts and strange sounds from unknown sources. But the story of the “Monkey Woman Bridge” added a flair all its own: a hybrid creature, part monkey and part woman, who would disturb anyone who spent too much time around a specific old bridge in Smyrna.
State historian Marty Luffman, who specializes

in Smyrna history, said he gets asked about the story frequently. Luffman acknowledged that while the story is “nothing but a legend,” it remains a captivating tale to tell.
The story unfolds in various ways depending on who tells it, but Luffman’s account describes a “woman on all fours” who was “like a little spider monkey.” She would appear from under the bridge when couples escaped there in the dead of night to spend some personal time together.
Smyrna Honors Trailblazing Law Enforcement Leader Sally Walls with Commemorative Plaque
Luffman explained there was a cemetery nearby where couples would drive to make out. The bridge, located about a hundred feet away, supposedly housed the monkey woman.
“As legend went,
you would be sitting out there making out with your girlfriend, and the windows would start steaming up, so you would roll the windows down to get fresh air in your car,” Luffman recounted. “Next thing you know, the guy would be sitting there laying back his head with his arm hanging out the window, and he’d just be tapping the side of the car, and the little woman would come up and crawl up his arm, trying to get in the car.”
The story continues with the person being harassed by the creature slapping the side of the car to try and shake the monkey woman off. Thus, anyone traveling to the bridge would slap the side of their cars, not to incite the monkey woman, but rather to shake her off the person’s arm.
While no documented photos of the acclaimed monkey

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