Hill was born Abby Rhoda Williams on September 25, 1861, the daughter of Henry W. and Hanett Hubbard Williams, in Grinnell, Iowa.[3] Early on, she received encouragement in art from her parents and later her stepmother, Mary, and instruction as a child from her aunt, Ruth Hubbard. Later, she studied with Henry F. Spread at the School of the AIC (1883). Following a teaching assignment at a girls seminary at Berthier-en-haut, Quebec (1884-1886) and a return to Grinnell, she studied art at the Art Students' League (ASL) in New York where she came to study with William Merritt Chase. In 1888, she married Frank R. Hill, a homeopathic doctor,[4] and the couple settled in Tacoma, Washington[5] and nearby Vashon Island, until 1910. They had one son and adopted three daughters.[6]
Her husband became incapacitated by psychotic depression in 1911, so the family moved to the small isolated community of Laguna Beach, California, for the benefit of the mild, sunny climate. Abby Hill was one of several early-20th-century American artists who built studios in Laguna Beach and transformed it into an artist community.[1] She became a founding member of the Laguna Beach Art Association.[1] She and her husband lived there until 1922, eventually returning to Tacoma, Washington and California while he was a patient at various California hospitals. Upon his release in 1924, she purchased an automobile and, for the next seven years, she and the family wintered in Tucson, AZ, travelling during the summers to the Deep South and to many locations in the West.[9]
Following the death of her husband in 1938, Abby Hill became bedridden. She died in San Diego, California on May 14, 1943.[10]
^ abcKovinick, Phil; Yoshiki-Kovinick, Marian (January 1998). An encyclopedia of women artists of the American West. American Studies. University of Texas Press. ISBN9780292790636.
^Franklin Harper, ed. (1913). Who's Who on the Pacific Coast. Los Angeles: Harper Publishing Company. p. 270.
^"Abby Williams Hill Biography". Collins Memorial Library: Abby Williams Hill Collection. University of Puget Sound. Archived from the original on 13 January 2019. Retrieved 17 January 2014.
^"Historical Note". Guide to the Abby Williams Hill Papers 1880s-1930s. NWDA. 2011. Retrieved 12 October 2013.
^Huberman, Bond (October 2, 2009). "A Woman in Love with the Great Wide Open". City Arts. Tacoma: Encore Media. Archived from the original on 2011-06-25. Retrieved 12 October 2013.