Born in Geneva, Wisconsin on December 14, 1842, as the son of Archibald and Eleanor Primer, Sylvester moved in 1850 as a child with his family to New York. They settled in the western part of the state in Genesee County. He attended local schools as a child. His higher education was interrupted by his serving in the American Civil War. Afterward Primer completed studies at Leroy Academy until 1868 and the Phillips Exeter Academy until 1871. He went to college, studying languages at Harvard University, where he earned a bachelor's degree in 1874 and was Phi Beta Kappa. He went to Europe to study with scholars there and worked at Leipzig, Göttingen, and Strasbourg, where he received his PhD in 1880.
After completing his graduate work, Primer returned to the United States, teaching first at Brown University. He taught at the College of Charleston in South Carolina from 1881 to 1890. During this period, he first directed scholarly attention toward the unique dialect of the city of Charleston in a paper he delivered at the Modern Language Association of America in 1887. This pioneering work, "Charleston Provincialisms", is one of the first attempts by a scholar to describe the speech of an American community. It was published as part of the Transactions of the Modern Language Association, vol. III, 1888, p. 84–99; it was also published in Europe in Phonetische Studien, vol. i, 1888, p. 227; and in the American Journal of Philology, IX, p. 198–213. Primer also wrote "The Huguenot Element in Charleston's Provincialisms;" it was published in Phonetische Studien, vol. iii, 1891, p. 139. In 1891, Primer joined the faculty of the University of Texas at Austin, where he served for more than 20 years. He first served as adjunct professor of Teutonic languages, eventually becoming an associate professor. He became chairman of the School of Romance language and in time, chair of a separate German department established at the university. There had been strong German immigration to the state during the mid- and late 19th century. Primer died at his home in Austin on August 13, 1912, survived by his wife and son. In Texas, his wife Lula Primer worked at the university after his death, retiring in 1941. She wrote her memoirs in the 1940s, which reflected her life in Texas. She had long been active in the University Methodist Church, the University Ladies Club, the Austin's Women's Club, and the Travis County Council of Women.
Works
"The Pronunciation of Fredericksburg, Va.", in Pub. Modern Language Association, vol. v, 1889, p. 185.
"Dialectical Studies in West Virginia", Colorado College Studies
He also published in German:
Die Consonatische Deklination in den germanischen Sprachen
Primer published annotated scholarly editions of several European plays, including
Gotthold Ephraim Lessing's Minna von Barnhelm, edited and notes by Primer
Gotthold E. Lessing, Nathan der Weise,, ed. Sylvester Primer
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Egmont, annotated edition and introduction in English by Primer
, annotated and edited by Primer, with introduction in English, Internet Archive edition available online
Primer's seminal works on Charleston's unique and vanishing dialect continue to be among the most important scholarly contributions to the subject today.
Legacy
Primer's personal and family papers are held by the University of Texas at Austin.