She graduated from Lincoln High School in 1924.[6] She completed a bachelor's degree at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln (UNL) in 1927.[7] In 1929, Hill—whose poetry appeared in campus publications[8][9]—became UNL's first African American female law graduate.[10][11] She was a member of the Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority chapter at UNL,[12] and the only Black member of the university vesper choir.[5][7] She was also active with the Interracial Commission of the university YWCA.[13]
Career
Shortly after law school, Hill became the first African American woman admitted to practice law in Nebraska. She taught briefly at Tuskegee Institute, and worked as chief counsel for an Arkansas insurance company.[1]
Personal life and legacy
Hill died in 1935, in Mississippi, at the age of 29.[14] She had been in poor health for some time, and was hospitalized for a surgery shortly before her death.[15] Hill's achievements were recalled when Elizabeth Davis Pittman became the second Black woman was admitted to the Nebraska bar, in 1948.[16] In 1982, Hill was one of the five historical Nebraskans honored during the state's first Women's History Week.[17]