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Home · Genealogy · Mattie Louise "Honey" Hill

Mattie Louise "Honey" Hill

1893 — 1979

Vital Events

Dates and Places

  • Born23 JUN 1893 · Viney Grove, Prairie Grove, Washington County, Arkansas
  • Died19 FEB 1979 · Wichita, Segwick County, Kansas
  • BuriedWichita Park Cemetery, Wichita, Kansas
  • SexFemale
Notes

Research Notes

Mattie Louise Hill, "Honey" On September 9, 1937, Dr. J. J. Baggett delivered me, Peggy Jane Converse, to my parents, Mary Stella Roberts and Everett Russell Converse in Prairie Grove, Arkansas. Dad drove a bus for Santa Fe Trailways so we lived in several small towns in northwest Arkansas, northeast Oklahoma and southwest Missouri before moving to Wichita, Kansas. In 1962 I married Jerry Gilbert Drennan and moved to his home town of Winfield, Kansas. Our son Mark is married to Mary Ann Hogan and they live in Rochester Hills, Michigan where he is employed by the Chevrolet Division of General Motors. Our son Steven is a sophomore at Southwestern College, Winfield, Kansas. Mattie Louise Hill was the grandmother who nurtured my love for Arkansas. When I was young, I would visit her there and she would let me go through her old trunk filled with pieces of my history while listening to stories of family, many of whom were born and lived in Washington County, Arkansas. Mattie Louise Hill was born June 23, 1893 in Viney Grove, Arkansas to Hypasia Amanda West and Robert Thomas Hill. She outlived three husbands, Prof. Wm. H. Roberts, Henry VanHoose and Anthony Rosebud. No children were born to any of these marriages. She married my grandfather, Prof. Wm. H. Roberts, after his wife, Mary Stella Hill, passed away a few days after giving birth to my mother, Mary Stella Roberts. She raised Mary Stella, Arline and James Roberts, her sister's children. While visiting with her about our 1975 vacation that included Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, she told me her grandmother, Martha (Rogers) West, was held prisoner in her home by two Northern generals while the Battle of Prairie Grove was being fought. The officers used the house as a hospital for the wounded and stacked five or six hundred dead in the smokehouse. They buried them in a large trench east of the house. After the war they were dug up and buried in a National Cemetery. Her grandfather, Robert Gentry West took his negro slaves south, possibly to Georgia while the war was being fought. I visited my great-great grandparents home with my grandmother in August of 1944. The next time was in 1976 and the smokehouse had been torn down and the house had been moved about one mile to the north. Frank and Judy West have built a new home on the original sight. My dear grandmother, Mattie Louise Hill, passed away in Wichita, Kansas, February 19, 1979 and is buried in the Wichita Park Cemetery. "Honey" is on her grave marker as that is what I always called her and that was how Mark and Steven knew her. The aroma and taste of her homemade clover-leaf rolls and the unconditional love she gave each of us is her legacy. By: Peggy Drennan