Hill, Evan

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Evan Hill, born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvannia, was an emeritus professor of journalism at the University of Connecticut and the son of Marie Schmeltz Hill and Louis Hill . He received his Bachelor of Arts from Stanford University in 1948 and his Master of Science degree from Boston University in 1950. He married Priscilla Fiske in 1946.

As a young man, Hill worked as a reporter and editor on newspapers in the state of Washington and in the Alaska territory before World War II. In September 1941, he went on active duty with the Alaska National Guard as a second lieutenant. Hill volunteered for combat and fought with the 79th Infantry Division in Belgium and France . He was severely wounded in northern France and hospitalized for nearly four years, during which time he began to write non-fiction magazine articles, and sold an article on wounded soldiers to this first national publication, Liberty . Hill was discharged from the Army at the rank of captain.

Hill then served as editor of the Argus Champion, at that time a semi-weekly newspaper in Newport, N.H. After receiving his master's at Boston University, he stayed on for seven years as a journalism professor. In 1956, Hill joined the journalism faculty at Ohio State University, before beginning a seven-year stint working out of his office on Main Street in Newport as a fulltime freelance non-fiction magazine writer for the Saturday Evening Post, the Reader's Digest, Redbook, the New York Times Magazine, the Saturday Review, Yankee and others and reporting throughout the United States, Canada and Europe . His work has been translated into five languages. Hill also ghost-wrote books and magazines for U.S. cabinet officers, federal court judges and clergymen.

In 1965, Hill was appointed head of the journalism department at the University of Connecticut and served in that position until he retired in 1984. He published approximately 160 magazine articles and eight non-fiction books, twice with co-authors, including a college journalism textbook. Hill was an occasional consultant to several newspapers, including the Boston Globe and the Providence Journal . In 1950, he was the winner of the annual essay contest of the American Newspaper Publishers' Association, and Freedom Foundation award.

Hill was a director of The Day Publishing Company of New London, Connecticut and a trustee of the Bodenwein Foundation from 1978 to 1989, a trustee of the Richards Library in Newport and a member of the Newport School Board, the Budget Advisory committee and was an early member of the Newport Planning Board. For several years after his retirement he taught after school writing courses to Newport students and to adults in after-hours classes. Hill compiled a Historical Chronology of the History of Newport, designed to aid local historians, it is available on the web.

Hill was especially proud of the success of his former students, some of whom have been reporters and editors at the Boston Globe, New York Times, Time Magazine, the Wall Street Journal and other prominent publications. Many achieved executive positions in corporate public relations. Many of his students became his friends after their graduation and kept in touch with him until his death.

Hill died on Saturday April 10, 2010, at the age of ninety-one.

From the guide to the Evan Hill Papers, 1880-1987, (Archives & Special Collections at the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center, University of Connecticut Libraries)

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referencedIn Wallace Earle Stegner Creative Writing Program : correspondence and manuscripts, 1949-1992 Stanford University. Department of Special Collections and University Archives
creatorOf Evan Hill Papers, 1880-1987 Archives & Special Collections at the Thomas J. Dodd Center.
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associatedWith Albert N. Jorgensen person
associatedWith Stegner, Wallace Earle, 1909- person
associatedWith UConn corporateBody
associatedWith University of Connecticut corporateBody
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