Robert Lee Durham


Robert Lee Durham was an American engineer, teacher, and author.

Life and career

Durham was born in Shelby, Cleveland County, North Carolina. His mother was Catherine Durham and his father was Plato Durham who was a well-known attorney of his time. His father died five years after the birth of Robert Lee Durham. In 1877, his mother married Benjamin Franklin Dixon, a physician, and after the marriage, Durham's family later resided in Oxford where Durham studied at Horner Military School.
In 1891 he graduated in civil engineering from Trinity College of Randolph County, which was later known as Duke University. Durham later worried that the increasing financial instability was serious enough to hinder a career in engineering, after which he studied law in Trinity College.
In 1892 he went to a private graduate school in Greensboro, North Carolina and later passed the North Carolina Bar Exam by the next year. By 1893, Durham started to specialize in legal matters in Rutherfordton. He married to Mary Willie Craton on 27 December 1893, daughter of John Miller Craton, a physician of their community. He had four children with Craton; Robert Lee; Margaret, who married Harry Russell Robey; Joshua Forman; and Ben Dixon Durham. Three of his sons died as children, and a daughter survived. Durham started taking interest in politics, after which he served as a delegate to the North Carolina Democratic Committee for four years from 1894 to 1898 and on the stage panel during the 1906 Democratic State Convention. In 1898 he assembled his own company, in Gastonia, of the North Carolina Infantry when the Spanish American War took place, however, he was not asked to serve in the war.
Durham thought that the idea of holding the office of State Senator was attractive, but he could not find agreement with his party over every issue. Durham found agreement with his party about the issues concerning race, taxation, and other policies, but disagreement over gold caused Durham to decline the office of State Senator. According to Durham, gold should be the standard of the country’s currency and he aimed to vote to guarantee its use. Durham declined to have his name on the ballot in an attempt to protect his political allies.
In 1908, Durham wrote a book named The Call of the South, which was based on a novel about miscegenation. In his book, he wrote about the amalgamation of white people and African Americans and warned against racial mixing, claiming that it threatened the downfall of the country. One review from the Associated Press remarked it as “one of the most interesting books I have ever had the pleasure to read”. L.C. Page and Company stopped publishing the book by 1911. For three years, sales gradually diminished until the publisher stopped the publication and Durham bought the rights of the book from the publisher.
In 1909 he ended his law practice and went to teaching, firstly at Davenport Female College in Lenoir where he was dean and taught mathematics, and then at Centenary College-Conservatory located in Cleveland. By 1911 he worked as a dean of faculty and taught mathematics at Martha Washington College and shifted to Abingdon, Virginia.
In 1919 Durham bought a half-interest in a girl's school called Southern Seminary in Buena Vista, Virginia. He turned into its principal and three years later bought the other half-interest from the cofounder of the school Edgar Healy Rowe. During his reign, first as principal and as president afterward, Durham aimed to strengthen the school's academic program and develop the mental, social, physical, and spiritual lives of students. He widened the school's curriculum to cover college-level courses, and in 1926 the school started to offer a junior college diploma. Durham expanded the facilities of the school to include a gymnasium, modern classroom infrastructure which was now having chemistry and laboratories, and Chandler Hall with a library and an auditorium. In 1922, Durham's daughter, Margaret, married H. Russell Robey, who later purchased Rowe's remaining interest in the school and became the business manager and treasurer of the school. College-level courses were added to the curriculum, and the first class of the new junior college program graduated in 1925. The school later came to be called Southern Seminary and Junior College.
Durham was a Democrat until he saw Franklin D. Roosevelt supporting the end of prohibition of alcohol. This led Durham to switch support to Republican candidate Herbert Hoover who would become president of the US in 1929. In 1932, Durham campaigned against Roosevelt in favor of Hoover, and called himself a "dry Democrat" who was "betraying" Democratic party "for a higher moral cause". Durham was baffled how he could be at odds with his own party. In an attempt to understand his own mind, he wrote a novel "Silhouette", which attempted to understand a southern man having lived through 1920s and into the 1930s.
Durham was an active member of the Methodist Church. In 1942 he retired from his position as the president of Southern Seminary and Junior College and his own daughter, Margaret Durham Robey, succeeded him as the president of the college. In 1943, he was elected as a member of American Mathematical Society and had his articles published by the organization.

Death and legacy

Durham died in 1949 due to liver cancer in his home. In 1953, his autobiography "Since I was born" was posthumously published.
In 1996, a group belonging to The Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter Day Saints bought Southern Seminary following its loss of accreditation. The college was converted into a four-year liberal arts college and in 2001 it became Southern Virginia University.
On June 2020, Southern Virginia University removed the name of Durham on its main academic building, in the wake of George Floyd protests, citing racist views of Durham.