Wade Hall Collection of American Letters: Harriet Poynter family papers
Abstract
Descriptive Summary
- Title
- Wade Hall Collection of American Letters: Harriet Poynter family papers
- Date
- 1877-1943, 1980-1982, undated (inclusive)
- Extent
- 5.25 Cubic Feet
- Subjects
- Education, Higher.
- Education -- Kentucky -- Shelbyville
- Education -- Women.
- Letters.
- School principals.
- Teachers -- Interviews.
- Women in education.
- Arrangement
- Collection is arranged into five series: Harriet Poynter letters, Horace Poynter letters, Juliet Poynter letters, Poynter family letters, and Poynter family papers. The Wade Hall Collection of American Letters has been processed into discrete collections based on provenance.
- Preferred Citation
- 2009ms132.0480: [identification of item], Wade Hall Collection of American Letters: Harriet Poynter family papers, 1877-1943, 1980-1982, undated, University of Kentucky Special Collections Research Center.
- Repository
- University of Kentucky
Collection Overview
- Biography / History
- Harriet Poynter (1884-1982) was born in Shelbyville, Kentucky to Reverend Wiley T. Poynter (1838-1896) and his third wife, Clara Martin (1846-1937). She was the youngest of Wiley's six children - he had three with his first wife Patty Poston (b. 1838); Annie (1858-1930), Henry (1860-1919), and Taylor Fletcher (1866-1927); and three with his third wife Clara; Horace (b. 1879), Juliet (1881-1974), and the aforementioned Harriet. Poynter's second wife, Kate Winn (1836-1874), passed away without having any children with him. The Poynter family owned and ran the Science Hill School, a school for women, from 1879 to its closure in 1939. After its closure, Harriet remained living on the property and rented out the dorm rooms as apartments.
- Science Hill School, originally known as the Science Hill Female Academy, was founded by Julia A. Tevis in 1825 as a female preparatory school. It was one of the first schools founded for girls west of the Allegheny Mountains, and along with teaching the social polishing courses of many preparatory schools, Tevis also taught science, math, history, rhetoric, and Latin. In 1879, Tevis sold the school to Wiley Poynter, who operated the school as a secondary academy to prepare young women for further education at colleges such as Vassar and Wellesley. Poynter and his descendants operated the school until financial difficulties during the Great Depression caused the school to close in 1939. Upon the school's closure it was the oldest Protestant female academy in continuous operation in the country, as well as in Kentucky.
- American Letters collector Wade Hall (1934-2015) was a native of Union Springs, Alabama. Starting in 1962, he lived in Louisville, where he taught English and chaired the English and Humanities/Arts programs at Kentucky Southern College and Bellarmine University. He also taught at the University of Illinois and the University of Florida. He held degrees from Troy State University (B.S.), the University of Alabama (M.A.), and the University of Illinois (Ph.D.). He served for two years in the U.S. Army in the mid-fifties. Dr. Hall was the author of books, monographs, articles, plays, and reviews relating to Kentucky, Alabama, and Southern history and literature. His most recent books include A Visit with Harlan Hubbard; High Upon a Hill: A History of Bellarmine College; A Song in Native Pastures: Randy Atcher's Life in Country Music; and Waters of Life from Conecuh Ridge.
- Source: Science Hill School (Shelbyville, Kentucky). (2019). Retrieved from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Science_Hill_School_(Shelbyville,_Kentucky)
- Scope and Content
- The Harriet Poynter family papers (dated 1877-1943, 1980-1982, undated; 5.25 cubic feet; 12 boxes) comprise letters, photographs, booklets, and interviews that document the Poynter family in Shelbyville, Kentucky and their operation of Science Hill School in the early twentieth century. The majority of the collection consists of letters between the Poynter family members discussing visits from friends, trips taken, personal health, the death of friends and neighbors, new pupils attending the school, tuition payments, and general operating news about the school. The photographs are all of Harriet Poynter, most likely from an interview she gave in 1980. The booklet is from one of the last years the school was in operation, listing graduates, attendees, the history of the school, and the faculty and administration. The interview consists of two audio tapes and typed transcripts of the interviews between Wade Hall and Harriet, discussing what the school was like, her family history, and aspects of her life.
- The Harriet Poynter family papers are part of the Wade Hall Collection of American Letters, which includes correspondence and diaries from all over North America covering the time period of the Civil to Korean Wars. The materials were collected by Wade Hall and document everyday men and women.
Restrictions on Access and Use
- Conditions Governing Access
- Collection is open to researchers by appointment.
- Use Restrictions
- The physical rights to the materials in this collection are held by the University of Kentucky Special Collections Research Center.
Contents of the Collection
Harriet Poynter letters, 1896-1925, undated
Annie Poynter to Harriet Poynter, 1901-1909, undated
Clara M. Poynter to Harriet Poynter, 1897-1905
Clara M. Poynter to Harriet Poynter, 1907
Clara M. Poynter to Harriet Poynter, 1908
Clara M. Poynter to Harriet Poynter, 1909
Clara M. Poynter to Harriet Poynter, 1910
Clara M. Poynter to Harriet Poynter, 1911-1922, undated
Henry P. Poynter to Harriet Poynter, 1906-1917
Horace M. Poynter to Harriet Poynter, 1898-1901
Juliet Poynter to Harriet Poynter, 1905-1907
Juliet Poynter to Harriet Poynter, 1908
Juliet Poynter to Harriet Poynter, 1909
Juliet Poynter to Harriet Poynter, 1910-1922, undated
Mary Evans to Harriet Poynter, 1897-1904
Robert Logan to Harriet Poynter, 1906-1907
Robert Logan to Harriet Poynter, 1908
Robert Logan to Harriet Poynter, 1909
Robert Logan to Harriet Poynter, 1910-1912
Robert Logan to Harriet Poynter, 1913
Robert Logan to Harriet Poynter, 1914-1918
Taylor Fletcher Poynter to Harriet Poynter, 1907-1910
Letters to Harriet Poynter, 1896-1904
Letters to Harriet Poynter, 1905-1909
Letters to Harriet Poynter, 1910-1915
Letters to Harriet Poynter, 1917-1925, undated
Horace Poynter letters, 1898-1901, undated
Annie McKenny to Horace Poynter, 1899-1900, undated
Clara M. Poynter to Horace Poynter, 1898-1899
Clara M. Poynter to Horace Poynter, 1900
Clara M. Poynter to Horace Poynter, 1901, undated
Juliet Poynter to Horace Poynter, 1898-1901, undated
Poynter family to Horace Poynter, 1898-1901, undated
Letters to Horace Poynter, 1898-1901, undated
Juliet Poynter letters, 1893-1910, undated
Clara M. Poynter to Juliet Poynter, 1897-1899
Clara M. Poynter to Juliet Poynter, 1900
Clara M. Poynter to Juliet Poynter, 1901
Clara M. Poynter to Juliet Poynter, 1902
Clara M. Poynter to Juliet Poynter, 1903
Clara M. Poynter to Juliet Poynter, 1904
Clara M. Poynter to Juliet Poynter, 1906-1909, undated
Harriet Poynter to Juliet Poynter, 1897-1900
Harriet Poynter to Juliet Poynter, 1901
Harriet Poynter to Juliet Poynter, 1902
Harriet Poynter to Juliet Poynter, 1903-1910
Henry Poynter to Juliet Poynter, 1893-1902
Horace M. Poynter to Juliet Poynter, 1894-1903
Poynter family to Juliet Poynter, 1894, 1903-1904
Letters to Juliet Poynter, 1896-1906, undated
Poynter family letters, 1877-1922, 1942-1943, undated
Letters to Clara M. Poynter, 1877, 1896
Letters to Clara M. Poynter, 1900-1916, undated
Letters to Juliet and Harriet Poynter, 1893-1922, undated
Clara M. Poynter to Wiley T. Poynter, 1877-1893
Poynter family letters, 1896-1917, 1980, undated
Alexander family letters, 1899-1916
Letters to Mary A. Buckner, 1916, 1942-1943, undated
Dahmen family letters, 1906-1915, undated
General letters, 1896-1899, 1920, undated
Poynter family papers, 1900, 1935-1936, 1980-1982, undated
Newspaper clipping re: Harriet's death, 1982 October 27
Science Hill School booklet, 1935-1936
Interview questions and transcript, 1980 August 18
Interview audiotapes (2), 1980 August 18
Photographs, 1980, undated
Portrait of Harriet Poynter, undated
Portrait of Harriet Poynter, undated
Portrait of Harriet Poynter, undated
Portrait of Harriet Poynter on patio, undated
Portrait of Harriet Poynter with eyes closed, undated
Blurry portrait of Harriet Poynter, undated
Blurry portrait of Harriet Poynter, undated
Portrait of Harriet Poynter on patio, undated
Side-profile portrait of Harriet Poynter, undated
Portrait of Harriet Poynter, undated
Portrait of Harriet Poynter seated on patio chair, undated
Portrait of Harriet Poynter, undated
Harriet Poynter [L] with an unidentified woman, undated
Portrait of Harriet Poynter, undated
Negative of Harriet Poynter standing on patio, 1980
Negative strip I: Harriet Poynter and unidentified woman [no. 8 on strip], 1980
Negative strip I: Harriet Poynter and unidentified woman [no. 7 on strip], 1980
Negative strip I: Portrait of Harriet Poynter [no. 6 on strip], 1980
Negative strip I: Portrait of Harriet Poynter [no. 5 on strip], 1980
Negative strip II: Science Hill School historical marker [no. 12 on strip], 1980
Negative strip II: Harriet Poynter with an unidentified man [no.11 on strip], 1980
Negative strip II: Harriet Poynter with an unidentified man [no. 10 on strip], 1980
Negative strip II: Harriet Poynter with an unidentified man [no. 9 on strip], 1980
Handwritten notes, 1900, undated
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UK Libraries Special Collections Research Center is open Monday to Friday, 9:00am to 4:00pm. Appointments are encouraged but not required. Schedule an appointment here.
Researchers must have an SCRC Researcher Account to request materials. View account set-up and use instructions here.
Questions? Contact SCRC via our Contact Form.
Requests
No items have been requested.
You may come across language in UK Libraries Special Collections Research Center collections and online resources that you find harmful or offensive. SCRC collects materials from different cultures and time periods to preserve and make available the historical record. These materials document the time period when they were created and the view of their creator. As a result, some may demonstrate racist and offensive views that do not reflect the values of UK Libraries.
If you find description with problematic language that you think SCRC should review, please contact us at SCRC@uky.edu.