Whitmell Hill

Whitmell Hill (February 12, 1743September 26, 1797) was an American planter from Martin County, North Carolina. He was a delegate for North Carolina to the Continental Congress from 1778 to 1780. Whitmell was the son of a John and Martha Hill, and was born in Bertie County, North Carolina. In 1760 he graduated from the University of Pennsylvania and returned to North Carolina to begin developing his own plantation, Hills Ferry, in what was to become Martin County when it was established in 1774. Hill supported the rising revolutionary sentiment, and when the Martin County militia was organized he was named its Lieutenant Colonel, and was later its Colonel in 1778. When the revolutionary Provincial Congress met in 1775-1776 he represented Martin County. Then in 1776 he was advanced to the Provincial Council (the uper house of the legislature) to represent the Edenton district. During this time he was also a member of the local Committee of Safety. Once North Carolina installed its new Constitution, Hill was elected to the state Senate, and presided in 1778. Later that year the Assembly named him as one of the states delegates to the Continental Congress. He was returned to the Congress until 1781, when the term limit imposed by the state constitution prevented his reappointment. He was re-elected to the state Senate in 1783, 1784, and 1788. In 1788 he was also a delegate to North Carolinas Convention to consider ratification of the U.S. Constitution. His outspoken support helped strengthen the forces that ultimately completed ratification the following year. Hill died and was buried at his home, Hills Ferry, in northwestern Martin County. In 1887 his grave was moved to the Trinity Cemetery, near Scotland Neck in Halifax County, North Carolina.

External link

Hill, Whitmell Hill, Whitmell Hill, Whitmell

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
genevieve lawrence
james lainez
annes de plerinage
knighton, staffordshire
george becali
jana bennett
izar
jenny abramsky
voluntary commitment
list of notable marxist theorists
ashley highfield
2004 in the united states
visicorp
charles nall cain, 3rd baron brocket
taurage
ban this filth
ariadne auf naxos
pascanas
diomidis spinellis
united states v. raines
alyx vance
greece interstate 8
unified market
absolute (record compilation)
care in the community
diffuse axonal injury
transylvanian saxons
ted williams tunnel
ford focus c max
kangaroo paw
bagatelle sans tonalit
jrgen e. schrempp
dalecarlia regiment
comic art collective
sinar
regional autonomy
callahan tunnel
caecilius
ivan bilibin
eastern guinean forests
homeward bound
sumner tunnel
jerri whittington
la galatea