Ralph Nading Hill (September 19, 1917 – December 10, 1987) was a Vermont writer and preservationist.[1]

Bernie sanders, Jennifer Ely, Madeleine Kunin, Ralph Nading Hill, and an unknown woman in front of the Allen house.
Ralph Nading Hill with Bernie Sanders, Jennifer Ely, Madeleine Kunin, and an unknown woman in front of the Allen House

Hill's books include The Winooski, Heartway of Vermont (1949),[2] which viewed Vermont through the lens of the river known to the Algonquians as "The Onion River" and Sidewheeler Saga, a book about the steamboat Ticonderoga, the last sidewheel steamer on Lake Champlain. Hill worked on the boat, which traveled between Vermont and New York across Lake Champlain, for three years.[3]

Hill later became well known in Vermont for preserving the Ticonderoga, at first trying to keep the boat running as an excursion steamer, and then persuading Electra Havemeyer Webb to buy the ship for her Shelburne Museum [citation needed]. The ship was transported overland to the museum in 1955.[4]

Bibliography edit

  • Lake Champlain, Key to Liberty
  • The Doctors Who Conquered Yellow Fever
  • Yankee Kingdom: Vermont and New Hampshire, 1960
  • Contrary Country: A Chronicle of Vermont
  • Vermont; A Special World
  • Vermont Album: A Collection of Early Vermont Photographs
  • The Winooski: Heartway of Vermont
  • The Voyages of Brian Seaworthy
  • Robert Fulton and the Steamboat
  • Lake Champlain Ferryboats: A Short History of Lake Champlain and the Story of Over 200 Years of Lake Champlain Ferryboats

References edit

  1. ^ "Ralph Nading Hill, 70; Chronicler of Vermont (obituary)". New York Times. December 12, 1987. Retrieved January 30, 2011.
  2. ^ Hill, Ralph Nading (1949). Winooski, Heartway of Vermont. New York: Rinehart. p. 304. ISBN 978-0-87797-159-7.
  3. ^ Special Collections, University of Vermont Library. "Inventory of the Ralph Nading Hill Collection". Retrieved January 30, 2011.
  4. ^ "Shelburne Museum: SS Ticonderoga". Retrieved January 30, 2011.