Person:Mary Hill (241)

Watchers
m. 6 Feb 1834
  1. Margaret Jane Hill1834 - 1854
  2. Sarah Ann Hill1836 - 1921
  3. Thompson W Hill1838 - 1863
  4. Randolph W Hill1840 - 1863
  5. William L Hill1846 - 1920
  6. Mary F Hill1848 - 1879
  • H.  Levert Kimball (add)
  • WMary F Hill1848 - 1879
m. Bet 1865 and 1867
  1. Leona Kimball1876 - 1935
  2. Benton Kimball1879 - 1899
Facts and Events
Name Mary F Hill
Gender Female
Birth[1] 7 Jul 1848 Chester District, South Carolina, United States
Census[3] 1850 Chester District, South Carolina, United States
Census[4] 1860 Chickasaw, Mississippi, United States
Marriage Bet 1865 and 1867 Chickasaw, Mississippi, United Statesto Levert Kimball (add)
Census[5] 1870 Chickasaw, Mississippi, United States
Death[1][2][6] 20 Mar 1879 Chickasaw, Mississippi, United States
Burial[2] Houston, Chickasaw, Mississippi, United StatesHouston Cemetery
References
  1. 1.0 1.1 Hill, George Anderson. Hill & Hill-Moberly connections of Fairfield County, South Carolina. (Ponca City, Oklahoma: Hill, c1961)
    133, 1961.

    From Hill family bible:
    "Mary F. (Fannie) Hill, born July 7, 1848, died March 20, 1879. Married Levert Kimball."

  2. 2.0 2.1 Find A Grave
    2009.

    Name: Mary Hill Kimball
    Birth: unknown
    Death: Nov. 20, 1879

  3. Chester, South Carolina, United States. 1850 U.S. Census Population Schedule
    55B, 1850.

    Roll: 851

  4. Chickasaw, Mississippi, United States. 1860 U.S. Census Population Schedule. (Tomball, Texas)
    23B, 1860.

    Roll: 579
    PO: Houston; Division No. 2

  5. Chickasaw, Mississippi, United States. 1870 U.S. Census Population Schedule
    169B, 1870.

    Roll: 724
    Township 14; Pg. 88

  6. United States Work Projects Administration. Born in Slavery: Slave Narratives from the Federal Writer's Project. (Manuscript Division, Library of Congress)
    Arkansas Narratives, Volume II, Part 3, pp 133-134, 1937.

    Interviewer: Miss Irene Robertson
    Person interviewed: Josephine Hamilton
    Hazen, Arkansas
    Age: 77
    “I was born near Houston, Mississippi, in 1860. We lived about three miles north when I can first recollect. My mistress was named Frankie Hill and my master was Littleton Hill...
    Once young mistress was sick. She had malaria fever. I was sitting down in the other room. Young master was lying on de bed in the same room. A woman what was waiting on her brought the baby in to put a cloth on him. He was bout two months old, little red-headed baby. He was kicking and I got tickled at him. Young master slapped me. The blood from my nose spouted out and I was jess def for a long time. He beat me around till Miss Polly come in there and said ‘You quit beating that little colored girl. You oughter be ashamed. Your wife in there nearly dead.’ ‘Yes maam, she did die.’ I never will forgit Miss Polly. I saved one of the young mistress little girl bout seven or eight years old. Miss Frankie raised a little deer up grown. It would run at anybody. Didn’t belong at the house. It got so it would run me. It started at the little girl and I pulled her in on the porch backwards and in a long hall. Her mama show was proud. Said the deer would paw her to death."