In 1960 at the age of 16, Hill attended
Xavier University in
Cincinnati, Ohio, on a football scholarship, where he was the leading scorer and ground gainer on the freshman football team. In 1961, he received a congressional appointment to the
United States Naval Academy. He was the first black man to play football at Navy and one of the first to play at any military academy. He starred on Navy’s plebe team where he was the favorite target for future
Dallas Cowboys quarterback and
Pro Football Hall of Fame member
Roger Staubach. Leading his team in all-purpose yardage, Hill helped them to an 8-1 record. After deciding to resign from the Naval Academy in 1962, Hill was recruited by future ESPN sports analyst
Lee Corso, then an assistant coach at
University of Maryland, to play for the Terps. Corso had been encouraged by Maryland head coach
Tom Nugent to try to find a black athlete to play for his team. Hill was at first hesitant to transfer, saying, "I'm no Jackie Robinson. I just want to play football." When told that it might be couple of years before another black man would be recruited, Hill relented. When Hill enrolled into Maryland in September 1962, he became the first African American to receive an athletic scholarship to play sports for a major university in the South. Maryland was a member of the
Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC). Neither it nor the other two major athletic conferences in the South, the
Southeastern Conference and the
Southwest Conference (now part of the
Big 12), had any African Americans playing football for any of their teams. After sitting out one year, Hill played his historic first game on September 21, 1963, at home against
North Carolina State. Hill emerged as a top wide receiver for the team. He did not encounter too much racism from other players, but found that coaches and fans could be highly offensive. The Maryland team was protected by
National Guard when it went out on the field at the
University of South Carolina in
Columbia. Nugent received a death threat by telephone and after the game, Hill's teammates helped him get through a crush of hostile fans. With the support of his teammates, Hill played out the season. When they traveled in the South, the team banded together, only staying at hotels and restaurants that would serve Hill. He finished with 43 catches, five short of the ACC record. At the end of that season, the Terps played an away game against the
Clemson University Tigers, who were led by coach
Frank Howard. After Maryland announced that Hill was to play, Clemson threatened to leave the conference. Howard vowed that his team would not allow any black to play in their stadium, which was popularly known as "Death Valley" due to the power of their team. They threatened to pull out of the game if Maryland brought Hill. Hill’s mother, Palestine, was refused general entry to the ‘whites only’ stadium, but Clemson President
Robert Edwards took Mrs. Hill to his private box. The game went on, and Darryl Hill set the ACC record in that game for pass receptions in a game, a record that stood for many years. ==Business career==