Chicago Sun-Times

PAT HILL, WHO RAN A FRICAN AMERICAN POLICE LEAGUE, DEAD AT 66

- BY MAUREEN O’ DONNELL Staff Reporter Email: modonnell@suntimes.com Twitter: @ suntimesob­its

Pat Hill, former executive director of Chicago’s African American Police League and a onetime police bodyguard for Mayor Harold Washington, fought for justice and equal opportunit­y, friends and family members said Tuesday.

“She was a tenacious activist who was relentless in her efforts to reform the Chicago Police Department, particular­ly as it relates to the African- American community,” said Conrad Worrill, a professor emeritus at Northeaste­rn Illinois University.

Ms. Hill, 66, died Sunday of cervical cancer at Rush University Medical Center, said her daughter Stacy.

After joining the Chicago Police Department in 1986, Ms. Hill fought for minority hiring through the African American Police League.

Fifteen years later, she said, “Nothing changes.” Though the department then boasted a growing number of African- American and Hispanic officers, she said, “The Irish run the police department.”

She grew up near Princeton Park. Her father Hercules was a mechanic from South Carolina. Her mother Lucille was from Georgia.

Young Pat excelled at track at Harlan High School, Worrill said. She ran with Mayor Richard J. Daley’s Youth Foundation track team, where she was mentored by the legendary Willye White, who participat­ed in track and field at five Olympics.

“In 1968, her senior year in high school, [ Ms. Hill] missed making the U. S. Olympic team, long jump, by a quarter inch,” Worrill said.

That year, she was stirred by the famous moment when sprinters Tommie Smith and John Carlos gave the black power salute at the Olympics.

“We all ran in the same meets,” she told the Sun- Times in 2002.

And in 1969, her daughter said, she was inspired by the league’s earlier incarnatio­n — the Afro-American Patrolmen’s League — as it challenged the official police story about a West Side raid that left Black Panthers Fred Hampton and Mark Clark dead. Later, a federal grand jury found that between 82 and 99 shots were fired by police, and just one came from inside the Panthers’ apartment.

Ms. Hill spent two years at Northern Illinois University before transferri­ng to Chicago State University, where she ran track and played basketball.

From 1974 to 1986, she taught physical education at city schools including Taft, Prosser, Clemente and Collins.

In 1986, she joined the Police Department. In a 2002 Sun- Times interview, she spoke about a memorable moment when she caught two 10- year- old boys jumping roofs on top of a church:

“I said, ‘ Tell you what, since y’all like church so much, I think we should go to church.’ So we go in there. The congregati­on was shocked. I was in full uniform. . . . The preacher says, ‘ We’ve gotta save ’ em,’ and people stood up and gathered around the boys. . . They were screaming and praying and saying, ‘ Yes, Lord!’ And when they got through, they signed ’ em up for Sunday school.”

Ms. Hill served on the security detail for Washington before becoming executive director of the African American Police League.

“Patricia Hill was instrument­al in changing the league name” from Afro- American Patrolmen’s League, said Howard Saffold, a former chief of the group. She wanted the name to reflect it represente­d both men and women, he said. “Her soul, her culture, her very being was put into [ league] efforts,” Saffold said.

After retiring, she lectured at Northeaste­rn’s Carruthers Center for Inner City Studies, taking classes to Selma, Alabama, “so her students could get a feel for re- enactments of Bloody Sunday,” Worrill said.

“I speak on the relationsh­ip between the policing system and African-American people in the world,” she said in the 2002 interview. “It’s doing exactly what it’s designed to dowhen it comes to black people. It’s designed to contain us and, if necessary, exterminat­e us. And it’s working. It’s called criminaliz­ing the race.”

Ms. Hill also helped found ProTech Security Group, her daughter said.

A fan of mud cloth and African prints, “If she wasn’t in a T- shirt with some type of activist slogan or organizati­on on it,” her daughter said, “she was in some type of African garb.”

An avid tennis player, she admired Arthur Ashe for his activism and athleticis­m.

She adored her mutt, Bushrod, named after the 1974 Gordon Parks Jr. blaxploita­tion film “Thomasine & Bushrod,” about bank robbers in the Old Southwest. She’d hoped to get a female dog and name it “Thomasine.”

Ms. Hill loved outdoor music festivals and performanc­es by Maze featuring Frankie Beverly. She also enjoyed steak burritos and watching TV’s “Blue Bloods.”

She is also survived by another daughter, Trennie; a son, Ronald Jr.; and a granddaugh­ter. Visitation is planned 5 to 9 p. m. Friday and also from 1 to 2 p. m. Saturday at Leak and Sons, 7838 South Cottage Grove. Burial is to follow at Oak Woods Cemetery.

“SHEWAS A TENACIOUS ACTIVIST WHOWAS RELENTLESS IN HER EFFORTS TO REFORM THE CHICAGO POLICE DEPARTMENT, PARTICULAR­LY AS IT RELATES TO THE AFRICAN- AMERICAN COMMUNITY.” CONRAD WORRILL, a professor emeritus at Northeaste­rn Illinois University

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 ?? | RICH HEIN/ SUN- TIMES ?? Pat Hill in 2001
| RICH HEIN/ SUN- TIMES Pat Hill in 2001

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