Individual Details

Jesse Ryals FURR

(20 Sep 1888 - 18 Aug 1959)

PICAYUNE — Christine Furr Metcalfe Carsley was buried on Saturday, June 12, in the Canton Cemetery, following a funeral mass held at Canton’s Sacred Heart Catholic Church.

Christine was born on Aug. 4, 1921, in Picayune. She was the daughter of the late Ruby Thornhill Furr and Jesse Ryals Furr, onetime owner and publisher of the “Picayune Item.”

The history of the Furr family is a big part of the story of the growth of Picayune, a time during which the “Item” grew from a small weekly to a daily newspaper along with the growing city of Picayune.

Furr at one time also owned the “Poplarville Free Press,” the first newspaper to be published in Pearl River County, and the “Lumberton Headblock.” The “Free Press” later went out of business and was supplanted by the “Poplarville Democrat.” The “Item” today owns the “Democrat.”

The Furr family owned and operated the “Item” for 30 years.

Jesse R. Furr, known for his dry wit and “home-spun stories”, was called Jess and purchased the “Item” in the Spring of 1914 from Grover C. Vickery of Carriere. At the time he purchased the newspaper, it cost him $350. The “Item” had been moved to Carriere because a huge sawmill had just been opened there and promoters thought Carriere would grow and Picayune would not.

The family tells the story that Furr wanted to borrow the $350 to buy the newspaper from the Bank of Picayune. The loan officer cut the check and before handing it to him, asked what he was going to do with the money. “Buy the Picayune Item,” Furr said.

The loan officer tore up the check, and told Furr, “If E.F. Tate can’t make it go, then nobody can.” Tate was the founder of both the newspaper and bank. Furr then turned to his brother to borrow the money.

The name “Picayune Item” had been discarded when the newspaper was moved to Carriere, and it had been re-named “The Pearl River Countian.”

Furr moved the “Item” back to Picayune and renamed it the “Picayune Item.” It had originally been started in 1904 by Tate, in Picayune, who also at the same time had founded the Bank of Picayune, which was later merged into Hancock Bank. The “Item” had changed hands several times, ending up in Carriere as the economic outlook for the small communities waxed and waned with the timber mills.

Some say Furr bought the newspaper, moved it back to Picayune and revived the original name (or masthead as it is called) because he had gotten news that L.O. Crosby, Sr., was coming to town and planning on setting up a huge sawmill to harvest the Blodgett tract of virgin longleaf yellow pine timber that covered Pearl River County. In 1914, when Furr moved the “Item” back to Picayune, it was a village with a population of 421 persons. After Crosby began the mill in 1916, the population burgeoned to almost 4,000 by the late 1920s.

Christine worked at the “Picayune Item” as a proofreader and later society editor after she graduated from Picayune High School in 1939. Christine remained in Picayune until 1950 when she married Thomas Oren Metcalfe, Jr. She and her husband then moved to Canton where Mr. Metcalfe’s family owned a business. Mr. Metcalfe died in 1974. In 1976 Christine married Dr. Robert A. Carsley, who died in 2000.

She served as president of the Maids and Matrons and was a communicant of Sacred Heart Catholic Church, where she was on the Altar Guild.

She died on June 9 in Madison. She was 88 years old. Her home was in Canton.

She was preceded in death by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jesse R. Furr; a brother, John Bryce Furr; and two sisters, Jesse Furr Scoggin and Thomasine Furr Blackwell.

Survivors include: daughters, Margaret Metcalfe Hassin of Flowood and Rooney Metcalfe Davis of Terry; sons Thomas Oren Metcalfe III of Gluckstadt and Dr. R.T. Carsley of Oxford; grandchildren, Drew Hassin of Brandon, Matthew Hassin of Flowood, Rachel Blount of Madison, Jacob Davis of Horsham, Penn., James Metcalfe of Gluckstadt, Michael Carsley of Sidney, Australia, and Christopher Carsley of Seattle, Wash; and three great-grandchildren.

Other survivors are sisters: Iva Loy Chambers of Hattiesburg, Charleen Schrock of Picayune and brother David Furr of Monroe, La.

The Furr’s had seven children, five girls and two boys. The girls: Christine, Thomasine, Jesse Mae, Charlene and Iva Loy, and two boys: John B. and David. Only Charlene, Iva Loy and David are still alive.

Events

Birth20 Sep 1888Wesson, Copiah County, MS
Marriage21 Dec 1915Ruby Edna THORNHILL
Occupation1920printer - Picayune, Pearl River County, MS
Occupation1930newspaper editor - Picayune, Pearl River County, MS
Death18 Aug 1959Picayune, Pearl River County, MS
BurialNew Palestine Cemetery, Picayune, Pearl River County, MS

Families

SpouseRuby Edna THORNHILL (1894 - 1992)
ChildLiving
ChildJessie Mae FURR (1918 - 2009)
ChildBlanche Christine FURR (1921 - 2010)
ChildIva Loy FURR (1923 - 2019)
ChildRuby Thomasine "Snokkie" FURR (1927 - 2009)
ChildCharleen F. FURR (1930 - 2022)
ChildDavid Alvin FURR (1935 - 2018)
FatherJames Henderson FURR (1857 - 1935)
MotherElla A. FARMER (1868 - 1903)
SiblingFURR (1885 - 1885)
SiblingLula C. FURR (1886 - )
SiblingJames Troy FURR (1887 - 1908)
SiblingWilliam Franklin "Willie" FURR (1890 - 1953)
SiblingMary Edna FURR (1892 - 1951)
SiblingHollis Rowan FURR (1895 - 1927)
SiblingFloyd Dexter FURR (1900 - 1959)
SiblingFURR (1903 - 1903)

Notes

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