At 88 years old, Hilda Hunter carries a lifetime of extraordinary stories — the kind that stay with you long after she finishes telling them.
She was born in 1937 to a remarkable pair of parents: a British chemist and an American physician serving as missionaries in Shanghai. Her earliest memories stretch across continents, but her childhood shifted abruptly when World War II began. Her mother brought Hilda and her sister back to Minnesota for safety, while her father was captured and held as a prisoner of war until 1945. That long separation shaped her deeply, planting the resilience and quiet strength that would guide her for the rest of her life.


Bright, curious, and ambitious, Hilda attended Harvard University in 1955, where she studied Biochemistry and dreamed of becoming a doctor. She worked in a virology lab in Boston — and that’s where she met the man who would become her husband. After marrying, she stepped into a new role she cherished: raising her four children at home for more than a decade.
And then, she reinvented herself.
As computers filled entire rooms and the field of computer science was just taking shape, Hilda stepped into a brand-new career. She worked in computing for Florida State University and later for the State of Florida, where she remained until her retirement in 1999.


Over the years, she also found joy in quieter passions — writing short stories, quilting, playing the dulcimer, and rug hooking. She loved talking about her Minnesota upbringing, her mother’s courage during wartime, and the blended British-American influence that shaped her family. Her husband’s British roots were a treasured part of their home life until his passing in 2008 after a long illness. She never sought another relationship; her devotion to him never faded.
Today, Hilda is surrounded by a family that spans four children and seven grandchildren — and by stories that reflect a life of courage, curiosity, and love.
And all you have to do is sit with her for a moment to realize: she’s lived every chapter with grace.



