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The name Betty Hill does not ring a bell to most Angelenos, but until her death in 1960, she was a well-known African American civil rights and political activist. She was one of the founders of the Los Angeles Chapter of the NAACP, was a Republican Party activist, a promoter of women's rights, and found jobs for Black Angelenos where none existed before.
Betty Hill was
born Rebecca Perkins near Nashville, Tennessee, around 1890, the granddaughter
of a freedman who bought his wife out of slavery, and the daughter of school
teacher who founded a "colored" school outside Nashville. After
attending local private schools outside
Abraham Hill
retired from the Army in 1913 and they moved near the downtown area of
In the late
1920s, she founded the Woman's Republican Political Studies Club (later known
as the Woman's Political Studies Club -- the WPSC), first in
As a civil
rights activist, she organized the Westside Property Owner's Association in
1920 after the Los Angeles Playground Commission initiated a policy of discriminating
against negroes. Determined to win through persistence, she went to court
25 times over a period of several years and lobbied each city councilperson
individually until 1931 when Judge Walter S. Gates decided that the Playground
Commission could not continue its policy of discrimination. This became
known as the infamous "swimming pool case."
Betty Hill and
the WPSC eliminated the Jim Crow dining room at Los Angeles General Hospital,
obtained the placement of the first Negro intern, the first Negro in the
Department of History, and the first resident physician of internal medicine at
Los Angeles General Hospital; the first African American instructor in the
Riverside public school system; and the first African American in the Los
Angeles County Department of Charities, Collection Department. Although
officially President Franklin Roosevelt ended racial discrimination in the
military, it still existed sub rosa. When
the military refused to bring back World War II fighter pilot Captain William
R. Melton to active duty, Betty Hill, WPSC, and Congressman Gordon L. McDonough
went to work and got results. On February 6, 1949, Captain Melton received
his orders to report to duty. Betty Hill and the WPSC also encouraged
education and gave out scholarships for needy students to further their
education. She was an active supporter of Zeta Phi Beta.
Beyond her
activities with the NAACP and the WPSC, she helped initiate the Urban League's
Los Angeles Chapter; was a State Central Committeewoman of Southern California,
63rd District; was active with the Eastside Settlement House, and the National
Council of Women; was the first chairperson of Girls Reserve of the YWCA, 12th
Street Branch; the Vice-President of the Organization of National Defense, West
Coast; and was also a 1940 delegate to the 1940 Republican National Convention
in Philadelphia. During a visit to
Betty Hill
continued to be active until old age slowed her down. She died on May 12,
1960. While the NAACP and Urban League continued to grow, with her death
the WPSC lived on for only a few more years.
-- contributed
by Richard Mendoza, 2004