Dr. Hubert McNeil Poteat

How are you related to Dr. Hubert McNeil Poteat?

Connect to the World Family Tree to find out

Dr. Hubert McNeil Poteat's Geni Profile

Share your family tree and photos with the people you know and love

  • Build your family tree online
  • Share photos and videos
  • Smart Matching™ technology
  • Free!

Dr. Hubert McNeil Poteat (1886 - 1958)

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Wake Forest, Wake County, North Carolina, United States
Death: January 29, 1958 (71)
Wake Forest, Wake County, North Carolina, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Dr. William Louis Poteat and Emma James Poteat
Husband of Essie Moore Poteat
Father of Private and William Morgan Poteat
Brother of Louise Martin and Helen Purefoy Marshall

Managed by: Keith Alan Brittingham
Last Updated:

About Dr. Hubert McNeil Poteat

https://www.ncpedia.org/biography/poteat-hubert-mcneill

Hubert McNeill Poteat, college professor, musician, author, and Shriner, was born at Wake Forest to William Louis and Emma James Purefoy Poteat. His early education was eclectic, and his principal instructor was his maternal grandmother, who operated a private school. The fundamental knowledge he received through her tutoring enabled him to enter Wake Forest College, from which he received the A.B. degree in 1906. Serving as instructor in Latin at the college for the next two years, he also earned the A.M. degree (1908).

While a student at Wake Forest, he developed interests that would dominate his later life. Study of the classics led to a doctorate. His proficiency in music was considerably advanced. Although he studied the violin, he did not often play this instrument, much preferring the organ. By 1905 he was ready to play at the inauguration of his father as president of Wake Forest College. As an athlete, Poteat won the singles and doubles Southern Inter-Collegiate Tennis Championships at Atlanta in 1907. Later he turned to the less strenuous game of golf, which, although he called it "the invention of the devil and perpetrated by his followers," he played every afternoon. His participation in Masonry began with his induction as entered apprentice by the Wake Forest Lodge on 21 Jan. 1908.

Also in 1908 he began studies towards a doctorate at Columbia University. Satisfactory academic progress did not prevent frequent attendance at the theater and the opera. Having thus been diverted but not interrupted, he was granted the Ph.D. degree in 1912 and immediately began to develop the characteristic features of his adult career. That year, after marrying Essie Moore Morgan on 26 June, he returned to Wake Forest College as professor of Latin. Poteat remained in this post, later serving as chairman of the department, until 1956, when the college was moved to Winston-Salem.

Poteat undertook scholarly writing soon after his academic appointment. In spite of administrative duties and the direction of the Glee Club (1912–23), he published a series of volumes consisting of colorfully, although scholarly, annotated texts and translations. They included Repetition in Latin Poetry (1912), Selected Letters of Cicero (1916, revised 1931), Practical Hymnology (1921), Selected Epigrams of Martial (1931), Selected Letters of Pliny (1937), T. Livius Narrator: Selections from Livy (1938), and a translation of Cicero's Brutus: On the Nature of the Gods, On Divination, On Duties (1950). These were interspersed with numerous journal articles. His professional activities also included a term as president of the Classical Association of the Mid-West and South in 1938. During summer sessions from 1924 to 1942 he taught at Columbia University.

Enthusiasm for Masonry and the Shrine in particular led him to the post of grand master of the Grand Lodge of North Carolina in 1923, to the honorary thirty-third degree, Knights Templars, to election as outer guard of the Imperial Shrine, and finally to the highest Shrine office, that of imperial potentate of North America, which he assumed at a meeting in Los Angeles in June 1950 and held during the next thirteen months.

Music was an ever-present interest. For about forty years he served as organist and choir director in the Wake Forest Baptist Church, Wake Forest. He gave many recitals on the organ and occasional vocal solos (while in New York he had been a member of the Brick Presbyterian Church choir and a soloist at the Church of the Intercession). In organ recitals he especially enjoyed playing transcriptions of more massive orchestral works, notably those of Wagner.

His outstanding achievements in these various fields were the result of a robust and even boisterous personality, a penetrating intellect, and a state of complete conviction. No one ever remained long in doubt about his opinions, which he expressed freely and pungently. Academically, as well as otherwise, he was a perfectionist, concentrating especially on purity and accuracy in the use of English. He spoke widely in the South, generally on causes he promoted from time to time. He was especially aroused by what he saw as a growing trend in the public schools towards vocational training and away from the humanities. He also held a violent dislike for "gospel hymns," which he called "jig tunes." When playing more traditional hymns, however, he spiritedly insisted that the congregation should not drag its singing.

Being near the statutory retirement age, in declining health, and somewhat resentful when the college moved to Winston-Salem, he chose to retire early and to remain at Wake Forest. On 29 Jan. 1958 he suffered a stroke and died the same day; two days later he was buried in the cemetery at Wake Forest. He was survived by his widow and two sons, Hubert McNeill, Jr., and William Morgan.

--

From The St. Petersburg Times, of Friday, Jan. 31, 1958:

Deaths Elsewhere

Dr. Hubert M. Poteat, 71, retired professor, author, Latin scholar, from a stroke, last night in Wake Forest, NC.

Poteat, a former Imperial Potentate of the North American Shrine, wound up a colorful 44-year teaching career at Wake Forest College in 1956.

A one-time southern college tennis champion, Poteat was affectionately called "old thunder" by thousands of Wake Forest students and alumni. He was the author of several books and musical compositions, and once was ranked among the top 10 pipe organists in America. He also was an expert chess player.

He spoke a half-dozen languages and was considered a foremost authority on Cicero and Pliny, H ewas a native of Wake Forest.

--

From The (Lumberton NC) Robersonian of Thursday, Jan. 30, 1958:

Dr. Poteat Dies at 71: Wake Forest's 'Old Thunder' Outstanding in many fields

Wake Forest, NC (AP) - Dr. Hubert M. Poteat, 71, educator, author and Latin scholar who died last night following a stroke, will be buried here tomorrow.

Funeral services will be held at 3 p.m. tomorrow in the First Baptist Church. Burial will follow in the Wake Forest Cemetery.

Dr. Poteat, for 44 years a member of the Wake Forest College faculty, suffered a cerebral hemorrhage yesterday morning and never regained consciousness.

A former Imperial Potentate of the North American Shrine, Dr. Poteat stepped down from his teaching career two years ago when Wake Forest College moved from Wake Forest to Winston-Salem.

His accomplishments were many. He was a former Southern tennis champion, author of several books and musical compositions, spoke a half-dozen languages and was a foremost authority on Cicero and Plyny. To thousands of Wake Forest students and alumni, he was affectionately referred to as "Old Thunder"

His father, William Louis Poteat, was president of Wake Forest College for 22 years.

Dr. Harold W. Tribble, president of the college, termed Dr. Poteat "one of the college's greatest scholars and teachers."

Dr. G. B. Earp, who became head of the department of classical languages when Dr. Poteat retired in 1956, said "he was the greatest teacher, the greatest scholar, and the greatest Christian gentleman I evern knew."

A native of Wake Forest, Dr. Poteat was an outstanding chess player and once was ranked among the top 10 pipe organists in America. He never attended public schools. He was tutored at home by his grandmother, who had conducted her own private school at Wake Forest for 28 years.

Dr. Poteat gave up tennis in favor of golf at the age of 45. he posted a 35 on the nine-hole Wake Forest course, a record that stood for several years.

--

view all

Dr. Hubert McNeil Poteat's Timeline

1886
December 12, 1886
Wake Forest, Wake County, North Carolina, United States
1919
February 22, 1919
1958
January 29, 1958
Age 71
Wake Forest, Wake County, North Carolina, United States