Munson Rufus Hill Explained

Munson Rufus Hill
Birth Date:4 May 1821
Birth Place:Monroe County, New York
Death Place:Memphis, Tennessee
Placeofburial:Oakland Cemetery
Allegiance: Confederate States of America
Branch:Confederate States Army
Serviceyears:1861–1863
Commands:47th Tennessee Infantry Regiment
Rank: Colonel
Spouse:Elizabeth Hale
Battles:American Civil War

Munson Rufus Hill (May 4, 1821  - October 24, 1867) was an American lawyer, politician and Confederate officer. Hill was born in Monroe County, New York. In 1839 he moved to Dyersburg, Tennessee, and then Trenton, Tennessee, ten years later. He attended Cazenovia Seminary in New York. In his antebellum career, he served as a lawyer and in the Tennessee state legislature, and married Elizabeth Hale. Hill was appointed colonel with the 47th Tennessee Infantry Regiment. He resigned his colonelship on January 5, 1863, due to "remittant [sic] fever" and gastroenteritis. Later that year, he lost a race for the Confederate States Congress. Hill died on October 24, 1867, of yellow fever in Memphis. He is buried at Oakland Cemetery in Trenton, Tennessee.[1] Hill's step-brother Lyman Rufus Casey was a U.S. Senator from South Dakota.

Notes and References

  1. Book: Allardice. Bruce. Confederate Colonels: A Biographical Register. registration. 2008. University of Missouri Press. 978-0826266484. 195–196.