Rhonda Hill
Honor Code SignatorySigned 11 Feb 2023 | 368 contributions | 22 thank-yous | 2,876 connections
Rhonda was born at Crawford W. Long Hospital in Atlanta in June 1959 where her mother was working as an RN. Her mom came to Atlanta to attend nursing school at CWL, and met and married her father, Ronald Kenneth Hill, a Staff Sergeant in the US Army. Rhonda began her life in Atlanta, and her family bought a house on a VA Mortgage in Doraville, Georgia. Her only sibling, R. Kenneth HIll, Jr. was born at their first home. They attended Peachtree High School in Chamblee, and she attended the University of Georgia in Athens where she earned a BA in Journalism.
She moved to Pittsburgh, PA in 1981 and worked for Pittsburgh National Bank, and moved to Manhattan two years later. She joined the Chase Manhattan Corporation in 1983, where she met and married Timothy G. Nolan. They bought a home in Beacon, NY in the Hudson Valley just north of Manhattan in 1993.
Her brother Ken died of a previously unknown genetic heart defect at age 26 in December 1988. Her mother died of pneumonia 15 months later. Her dad came to live with her family in Beacon, NY in 1995.
She worked at Chase until 2000 when she went to Deutsche Bank, which was located across the street from 2 WTC. She was in town the day the planes crashed into the building, and returned safely. She worked remotely after 9/11 and retired from her career in finance a few years later.
She is mother to William Nolan and Luther Nolan, both of whom were born in Cortlandt NY, in 1992 and 1999, respectively.
She divorced Tim in 2007 and moved to a smaller home in Beacon, NY, where she lives with her second husband, Morgan P Donohue, who she married in 2015.
Rhonda was recorded as a resident in Atlanta, Georgia, United States.[1]
Rhonda was at school in 1977 in Dunwoody, Georgia, United States.[2]
Rhonda, daughter of Ronald K. Hill, married Timothy Nolan on 25 July 1987 in Highlands , Garrison , N.Y.[3]
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Categories: Appalachia Project
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Paula Southern Team Leader
Congratulations on certifying to work on pre-1700 profiles! It’s very important to read and understand the Pre-1700 Profiles page. These profiles for deep ancestors are shared by many, and collaborating on them works best if we all follow the guidelines in the certification quiz.
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Sheryl ~ WikiTree Pre-1700 Greeter
I see Tabor has already welcomed you to the South Central Team so I will just say "Welcome" to the Southern Team also.
Please go to the team page at https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Southern_Appalachia_Team and add your interests beside your name which is listed somewhere around the midde of the page. You can also check out some of the interests of the other team members if you wish. If you do not wish to add your interests yourself you can send the information to me and I will be glad to post it for you. Just go to my profile and click on send private message.
Paula Southern Applachia Team Leader
You joined the South Central Appalachia Team! Welcome! When you have the chance, please add your South Central Appalachia interests next to your name on our South Central Team page. While you’re there, you can read what others are working on and get to know us a little bit. Then join us on the Discord channel – we are a friendly bunch!
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Tabor
Just saw that you noted that your Great Grandmother was a Tabor from Western North Carolina. (I, too, follow the name Tabor, for obvious reasons.) Those mountains are crawling with my relatives and I suspect we'll find we're cousins once we've both filled out our trees.
My grandmother was Blanche Tabor Burchard. Her parents were George Leroy Tabor, Sr. and Rachel Matilda (Smiley) Tabor. Great granddaddy's parents were James Sharpe Tabor and Lydia Jane (DeHart) Tabor. John was one of the nine children of Nathan and Elizabeth (Condra) Tabor -- surely one of these lines connects with yours!
Glad to meet you here on WikiTree. One other note -- there is a project that focuses on folks from Western North Carolina and a ton of other areas that make up Appalachia. The Appalachia Project has a great group of people involved and they are super helpful -- they often come to your rescue when you're stuck trying to find a source or figure out a puzzle. You would be warmly welcomed, if you decided to join the project. Let me know if you'd like more information about the project.
In the meantime, if you need any help with how WikiTree works, how to find sources, or unravelling a puzzle of your own -- just let me know! Happy to help.
Welcome to WikiTree!
Tabor
John Dehart, Tabor, and myra’s Caroline LeQuire are my second great grandparents. And my great grandparents are Addie, Amanda Tabor, and William Marion Gladson.
I use Ancestry for my main tree and don’t really know how to get it onto wiki tree.
I came to wiki tree because I need help with my southern Appalachian family, and I was running out of railway on some of the lines.
Thank you so much for reaching out. I really don’t know how to work with a tree so I will learn! Do you also use Ancestry? My name on there is also Rhonda Kay Hill and my trees and my DNA are public. If there’s some sane way to get them onto wiki tree I will
I reached out to my fellow Appalachia Project members and asked about how to bring things over from Ancestry. Ill let you know when I get an answer.
There is a key difference between WikiTree and Ancestry. WT has one tree. Just one. Not yours and mine -- but the human family. So once you put in your parents and link up to your grandparents all the work others have done to put in the rest of the Tabors will pop up on your tree.
If you go to the search box at the top of this page and type in Tabor-1767 and hit enter, you'll go straight to Ada Amanda Gladson's WT profile. It lists her children -- one of which must be your grandparent. Once you work your way down as far as you can, you can start added their children (your parents) and you'll be connected to the one, big tree. You might not need to bring a lot over from Ancestry, once you see what is already here.
Let me know if any of that is confusing. I'm excited to meet a cousin!
Oh, and the Appalachia Project is a project you join. Go to https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:Appalachia to read about it and join up!
Tabor
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