“Granted the limitations of her method and of her present opportunity, she deserves nothing but praise for her conscientious and capable investigation of the resources at her command and for her judicious selection and arrangement of her well-chosen material.” Edith Kellogg Dunton.

+Dial. 42: 177. Mr. 16, ’07. 1480w.

“Miss Constance Hill writes of the happy little household with all her wonted grace, and the book abounds in quotations from diaries and other documents, hitherto unpublished, and is further enriched with charming illustrations.”

+Lond. Times. 5: 376. N. 9, ’06. 770w.

“Of the tribe of gentlewomen who are exploiting the eighteenth century at their ease, Miss Hill is the least amateurish and most entertaining.”

+Nation. 83: 486. D. 6, ’06. 980w.
+N. Y. Times. 11: 800. D. 1, ’06. 200w.
+N. Y. Times. 12: 72. F. 2, ’07. 560w.

“Miss Constance Hill has made the happy discovery of a new lode in the Burney mine.”

+Sat. R. 102: 742. D. 15, ’06. 960w.

“She has little to tell us that we do not already know. Her stories have been told a hundred times.”

Spec. 97: 828. N. 24, ’06. 1270w.