Teacher Immediately after her graduation from the high school, in 1856, she began to teach school in
Franklin, Massachusetts. A member of the school board inquired if she had brought a certificate of moral character, to which she replied, "All the moral character I have, sir, I have with me." A year later, she was asked to take a school in one of the outlying districts of Fitchburg. The school was a hard one to discipline, and the first great test of her courage came at this point in her career. The Civil War was in progress, and in her district were a number of people who had been greatly opposed to her appointment because of her father's abolitionist views, with which she was known to sympathize. On this account, she was refused
board in the neighborhood, but was not thus deterred from taking the school. For three months, she walked daily to teach the school, and not only were the unruly children brought into subjection, but all the parents, including her bitterest opponent, became her firm friends. Going to
Indianapolis to teach in 1864, she went about with
Superintendent Abram C. Shortridge to grade the schools of that city. Later, she taught for a year in
Terre Haute, Indiana. Two of her pupils, while teacher of an intermediate grade in Fitchburg, were
Maurice Howe Richardson (surgeon of Boston) and
Edward Peter Pierce (Justice of the
Massachusetts Superior Court).
Activist During the Civil War, Hill (then Miss Trask) collected money to give a flag to the Washington Guards of Fitchburg, presenting it the night previous to their departure for the battlefield, urging the soldiers to fight courageously for the freedom of the slave. At these words, the colonel of the regiment took offense, and in a cruel way denied that that was the issue. But brave men defended the young woman. When the Soldiers' Monument in Fitchburg was dedicated, some years after the close of the war, Hill with her two children was at her father's home. The company, much depleted, passed by, bearing the tattered flag, which had been through many battles. The two children, one representing a soldier, the other the Goddess of Liberty, were standing upon the porch of the old homestead. As the company reached the house, they halted, and saluted the children; Hill, from behind the children, responded to the graceful tribute. The colonel before his death acknowledged his mistake, and apologized for his rudeness at the time of the flag presentation. In June, 1867, she married John Lange Hill (1845–1930), of Boston. When the WCTU was organized (1873), Hill, who was then residing in
Braintree, Massachusetts, was chosen the first president for
Norfolk County, Massachusetts. Thereafter, she held some official position in that society. For ten years, she was superintendent of the prison, jail, and almshouse department, and was later superintendent in this department for
Middlesex County, Massachusetts, and president of the Winter Hill WCTU of
Somerville, Massachusetts. When the Australian ballot system was introduced in Massachusetts, Hill was appointed by the Prohibition State Committee to go from town to town with the apparatus illustrating the process of voting under the new system; and large audiences composed of all parties came to see and hear. No opportunity was lost by the speaker to remind her hearers of the inconsistency of allowing a woman to instruct men in the process of voting and denying her the right to vote herself. In 1885, the
New England Helping Hand Society was formed, its aim being to provide at a moderate rate a comfortable home for young women earning low wages. Of this society, Hill was for several years the secretary, and for ten years, she was its president. She aided in many ways in ameliorating the conditions of working men and women. In 1888, Hill's residence was in
Charlestown. For two years, she had been president of the Ward and City Committee of Women Voters, and she was also president of the Bunker Hill Woman's Educational League, an organization that was formed in February. Through the efforts of this organization alone, 2,600 women were assessed, with a view to taking part in the school election; and a most vigorous campaign was carried on, women being stationed at the various registration places to watch proceedings. The result of the election was gratifying. Not only was the whole school board ticket successful, but the women had significant influence in bringing about a change at City Hall. While serving as president of the Charlestown branch of the Loyal Women of American Liberty, the Independent Women Voters' party became the outgrowth of the struggle of 1888, and until 1896, Hill was the leader of this party. In 1889, the ''Woman's Voice and Public School Champion'' was first printed. Hill became the editor and general manager (1890–1907)). In 1895, she was chosen State secretary of the Massachusetts Branch of the
International Order of the King's Daughters and Sons, an organization having 6,000 members in the State, comprising 270 circles and 229 independent members, who carried on charitable work. A vacation home at
Hanson, Massachusetts, which accommodated 60 people, among them many mothers and their young families, was a State work. The vacation home of The King's Daughters is Gordon Rest. For eighteen years, Hill had personal supervision of this home. The work increased year by year, and was the largest undertaking of its kind in the State. She always stood firmly for free speech. For eighteen years, Hill's voice was heard in pulpit and on platform in the advocacy of good causes in Massachusetts and other States. The Independent Women Voters of
Detroit,
Michigan, were organized by her efforts. In Hill's evangelistic and Bible services, a simple faith was taught, with a reliance on Christ as mediator and Saviour. The result of labor in prisons and missions was gratifying in the reconstruction of broken-up homes, in the obtaining of employment for disheartened men and women, and in the redemption of those who had developed bad habits. Following in the footsteps of her father, she helped the anti-cigarette movement and was instrumental in banding hundreds of young people together to labor in Christian service. Possessed of a hopeful, cheerful temperament, obstacles which might seem to others very hard to overcome did not hinder or discourage Hill. ==Personal life==