Hill was born Frances Jane Hassler in
Berkeley, California to Gerald L. Hassler and Mildred E. Mathias on October 27, 1939. Her family moved to
Binghamton, New York during
World War II, then returned to California when the war ended in the late 1940s. At this time, both of her parents were on staff at
UCLA: her father in the Department of Engineering and her mother as director of the botanical garden, which now bears her name (see
Mildred E. Mathias Botanical Garden). Hill began her post-secondary education at
Reed College, which she attended for two years before transferring to
University of California, Berkeley. She received her
B.A. from
UC Berkeley in 1960, then matriculated at
UCLA to pursue her
Ph.D. There she studied under influential figures in anthropology and linguistics including
Harry Hoijer and
William Bright. She met her husband, Kenneth C. Hill, in Hoijer's
historical linguistics course in 1961. The Hills married in 1962 and had the first of three children that year. Hill finished her dissertation in 1966. The Hills then moved to
Ann Arbor, MI, where Kenneth worked in the Department of Linguistics at the
University of Michigan. Hill worked at
Wayne State University in the Department of Anthropology from 1968 to 1983, eventually becoming head of the department. She took a sabbatical from 1974 to 1975, as did Kenneth, and they used this time to begin work on
Nahuatl. In 1983, she moved to
Tucson, AZ to work at the
University of Arizona as a professor of Anthropology and Linguistics. While at the University, Hill received awards from the
American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the
American Association for the Advancement of Science, the Wenner-Gren Foundation, and the
American Anthropological Association. From 1997 to 1999 she served as president of the
American Anthropological Association. Around this time, Hill also successfully championed a program at the
University of Arizona that would allow for a joint Ph.D. in
anthropology and
linguistics, a testimony to her influence in and passion for both disciplines. In 2009 she retired as Regents' Professor Emerita of Anthropology and Linguistics at the
University of Arizona, but continued to work on a variety of research projects until her death. Hill published more than 100 articles and chapters, as well as eight books, spanning many sub-disciplines of both linguistics and anthropology. Her work in
descriptive linguistics, especially focused on languages spoken by American indigenous people, also made important contributions to discussions of language policy and language endangerment. She contributed to the fields of
linguistic anthropology and
socio-linguistics, researching the use of
Mock Spanish and the intersections of language, culture, identity, and power. Though Hill's intellectual pursuits were diverse, they all embodied her self-proclaimed commitment to linguistic and anthropological studies that have a real-world impact on people's understanding of languages and on the people that speak them. == Native American languages ==