Bet you didn’t know!… Special Collections in Washington State Libraries - Abby Williams Hill Collection
Abby Williams Hill who lived in the late 19th and early 20th century (1861-1943) was a remarkable woman for her time. She was a painter and a social activist, a brave woman who did not let much stand in her way. She was the founder of the Washington State Congress of Mothers which eventually became known as the PTA. She was a supporter of early childhood education. Visits to the Tuskeegee Institute and the Flathead reservation made her a champion of equal education for all. However despite these accomplishments, she is best known for her landscape paintings of the American West.
In the early 1900s Hill was commissioned by the Great Northern and later the Northern Pacific railway to produce paintings to promote tourism in the area. Leaving her husband behind in Tacoma but taking her four young children, one son and three daughters, Hill camped and painted 22 paintings in 18 weeks. Instead of a salary the railroad gave her tickets for a 1000 mile long journey for herself and her children. This allowed her to keep rights to her work and later she negotiated to have the paintings returned. The experience of producing these paintings created in Hill a lifelong love for the outdoors. Later in life, concerned by the threat of commercialism, Hill traveled for 7 years in the 1920s and produced a series of National Parks paintings to document what she viewed as disappearing landscapes.
Fields, Ronald. "The wanderer, a portrait of Abby Williams Hill." The University of Puget Sound. N.p., n.d. Web. 7 July 2016
Newsclipping, “Mountain in State of Washington Named in Honor of Booker Washington by Mrs. Abby Williams Hill, Painter”, The New York Age, March 8, 1930, Box 17, Folder 15, Abby Williams Hill Collection, Collins Memorial Library, University of Puget Sound, Tacoma, Washington.
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