Margaret Hunt Hill was an American heiress and philanthropist.
Background
Margaret Hunt Hill was born on October 19, 1915 in Lake Village, Arkansas. Her father was H. L. Hunt (1889–1974) and her mother, Lyda Bunker (1889-1955). She grew up in El Dorado, Arkansas and Tyler, Texas, and moved to Dallas, Texas in 1938.
She worked as an assistant for her father, until she got married.
Education
She graduated from Mary Baldwin College, a private women"s college in Staunton, Virginia.
Career
She had six siblings: Caroline Rose (born 1923), H. L. III (1917-2005), Lyda Bunker (born and died in 1925), Nelson Bunker (1926-2014), William Herbert (1929), and Lamar (1932-2006). She also landscaped the Falcon Stadium of the United States Air Force Academy in 1962. Philanthropy She served as a Treasurer of the Dallas Junior League, President of the Dallas Women"s Club, as well as Chairman of the Dallas Easter Seals and the Dallas Society for Crippled Children.
She founded the Dallas Heritage Society, where she served as a Director throughout her life.
She also served as Vice President of the Dallas Historical Society. From 1981 to 1987, she served on the Governor"s Texas Historical Society, and from 1981 to 1988, as a Treasurer of the Friends of the Governor"s Mansion.
Together with Van Cliburn (1934–2013), she served as co-Chairman of the 60th Anniversary of the Discovery of the East Texas Oil Field. The ceremony was held at the East Texas Oil Field Museum, which she helped create.
She sat on the Board of Directors of the Garden Club of America.
Moreover, she founded the Kissing Camels Garden Club and served as President of the Junior League Garden Club and the Founders Garden Club. Additionally, she founded the Dallas Cotillion, an annual debutante ball in Dallas. She also served as the Queen of the Texas Rose Festival in Tyler, Texas in 1935.
Personal life They had three children: Lyda Hill (born 1942).
Alinda Wikert Albert Galatyn Hill, Junior. She died on June 14, 2007 in Dallas, Texas.
She was buried in the Sparkman-Hillcrest Memorial Park Cemetery. Legacy The Margaret Hill Bridge in Dallas, designed by Santiago Calatrava, is named in her honor.