Visitors Guide
Facebook
Twitter
Pinterest
Instagram
YouTube
Places to Stay
Events
See & Do
Eats & Drinks
Weddings
About
Culpeper History
Videos
Blog
Contact
Site Search
Search
Right the Record
Get Outside
WanderLOVE
Weekend Warriors
Visit a Regional Park
Scenic Drives
Live Local
Pet-Friendly Culpeper
Handmade
Food Scene
Eat Fresh
Best of Local Chefs
Hop, Vine & Shine
Industry
Culpeper Competes
Right the Record
Get Outside
Live Local
Food Scene
Industry
Right the Record
John Preston “Pete” Hill (1882-1951)
1882
John Preston "Pete" Hill, Negro League baseball player and manager for the Negro Leagues, was born on 12 Oct., probably 1882 in Buena, Culpeper County, to Ruben Hill and Elizabeth Seals, both likely previously enslaved.
1899
Elizabeth Hill, Pete and two brothers relocated to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania where he later started playing professional baseball at the age of 17 in 1899 with the Pittsburgh Keystones, one of the many all-black teams that existed before the first Negro Baseball League was founded.
1906
Hill married Gertrude Lawson in 1906 to 1907. The couple had a son born in 1910 named Kenneth Hill.
Banned from whites-only major leagues, Hill became a star outfielder for African American teams, notably the Philadelphia Giants and Chicago American Giants; A Cuban league 1910/11 winter-season earned him a batting champion (with a .365 average).
Hill hit 28 home runs for the Detroit Stars in 1919 (when Babe Ruth hit 29 in more games), marking Hill as one of black baseball's earliest power hitters.
1925
Hill retired from professional baseball in 1925 at the age of 43 and spent the rest of his life in Buffalo, New York where he worked as a porter on the Delaware, Lackawanna, and Western Railroad.
1951
Hill died 19 Dec. 1951 from coronary thrombosis in Buffalo, New York and is buried in Alsop, Illinois
Pete was inducted posthumously into the National Baseball Hall of Fame in 2006. At the time of his induction, he was listed as Joseph Hill born in Pittsburgh, PA. Through the efforts of baseball enthusiasts, his great nephew and the detailed research of Zann Nelson, the Hall of Fame corrected the errors and changed his plaque.
Right the Record Home Page
People
Barber, Jr., Dr. Elijah
Harrison Beck, Ruby May
Hill, John Preston "Pete"
Jennings, Gerard Alexander
Holmes Sr., John Alfred
Lightfoot Family
Love, Charles Edward "Skinny"
Madden, Reverend Willis Jackson
Marshall, Sr., Mortimer Mercer
Payne, Henry Gordon "Ace"
Payne Lovell, Annie Laura
Taylor, Andrew Earl
Places
Barber Medical Office
Jennings Lunch Room
Holmes-Taylor Building
Lightfoot Building
Macoy Building
Marshall Funeral Service
Skinny Love's Barber Shop
Right the Record Program Information