P. M. Puryear, Educator
Portious Moore Puryear was born in
Oxford, Granville County, North Carolina, November 26, 1839. He
moved with his family to Walker County, Georgia, in the early
part of 1860. He soon enlisted in the 23rd Georgia regiment
Confederate Army and served until it surrendered. He was under
Stonewall Jackson and in the battle when that officer received
the wound that caused his death. He later joined General Robert
E. Lee's regiment and was with him at the surrender of
Appomattox.
He was a graduate of Princeton
University. In 1867 he married Miss Margaret Gunn and came to
the Kittrell community of Rutherford County, Tennessee.
In 1870 he became principal of Science
Hill Academy and taught there for seventeen years. It was the
only school in that part of Rutherford County. Students came
from other communities and boarded to go to school there.
Professor Puryear, being a highly educated man, developed a very
broad curriculum. He taught Greek, Latin, higher mathematics and
science. He had two or three assistants who taught the basic
skills of reading, writing, and arithmetic.
He became a magistrate from the 19th
Civil District in 1876. He took an active interest in the
proceedings of the Quarterly Court and seldom missed a meeting.
He belonged to Haynes Chapel Methodist
Church which he helped build in 1884 and was a faithful worker
there and "a public spirited and liberal, earnest supporter of
all propositions for the good of the public" until his death on
November 30, 1891.
Kittrell | Rutherford County |
Tennessee
Source: Rutherford County Historical
Society, Publication No. 2, winter, 1973.
(Sources: Interviews with Miss Bertha Puryear; Family records;
Copy of Resolutions passed by the Rutherford County
|