Alice Littlefield

Alice Tillar Littlefield was the wife of Texas businessman and philanthropist George W. Littlefield. The Littlefield Dormitory at the University of Texas is named in her honor.

Alice Littlefield
Born(1846-04-10)April 10, 1846
DiedJanuary 9, 1935(1935-01-09) (aged 88)
Resting placeOakwood Cemetery in Austin
Spouse(s)George W. Littlefield (married 1863-1920, his death)
ChildrenTwo children died in infancy
Parent(s)William Tillar
Mildred Lundy

Early life

Alice Payne Tillar was born in Virginia on April 10, 1846, to parents William Tillar and Mildred Lundy.[1] Her father moved the family to DeSoto County, Mississippi, where he died in 1850.[2] After her mother's marriage to Whitfield Harral, Jr. in 1855, Alice gained three older step-brothers.[2] In 1857, Harral moved the family to Gonzales, Texas, where Alice enrolled in Gonzales College at age 11.[3] The college more closely resembled the present-day definition of a school than that of a modern college or university. In addition to the standard curriculum, Alice studied painting, music and French.[2]

Personal life

Alice Tillar presumably met George W. Littlefield during their studies at Gonzales College. By September 1861, when George left to fight for the Confederacy during the Civil War, the couple were engaged.[2] Two years later, when Littlefield was home on leave, the couple married on January 14, 1863, in Houston, Texas.[3] Major Littlefield was discharged from the Confederate Army a year later for injuries, and the couple returned to manage his family plantation in Gonzales County.[4] By all accounts, the couple had a happy marriage.

Their marriage produced two children, both of whom died in infancy.[5] Ed Rhodes Littlefield was born in 1866 and died less than a year later. The second child, a girl, was born in 1868 and died at birth.[2] Lacking children of their own, George and Alice Littlefield became very close to their extended family, and their nieces and nephews were frequent visitors in their home. They paid for the college educations of all 12 nephews and 17 nieces, established each nephew in business and gave each niece a home.[3] In the words of one of Alice's nieces, "Everyone in the family worshipped Aunt Alice. I couldn't have loved her more if she'd been my own mother.”[3]

In 1883 Alice and her husband moved to Austin, where Major Littlefield prospered as a banker and business owner. In 1893, he commissioned an ornate Victorian dwelling that came to be known as the Littlefield House. To complete the house's unique look, he imported a Deodar Cedar from the Himalayas and had it planted on the grounds. Alice helped take care of the property.

A pastel drawing of Alice Littlefield created by her niece Sarah Harral Duggan.

Achievements

Alice Littlefield made several impacts on the city of Austin. She organized a local children's home, and joined Austin's Albert Sidney Johnston Chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy in 1901.[3][2] The Johnston Chapter focused on historical preservation and working with children. In 1903, she served as a delegate for the chapter at the Daughters' tenth annual meeting in Charleston, South Carolina.[2] Alice Littlefield is most well known, however, for the University of Texas residence hall that bears her name. While in Austin, George Littlefield donated $300,000 to the University of Texas for the creation of a dormitory specifically for freshman women. The residence hall was named in honor of Alice, and she was the guest of honor at its dedication in 1927. Alice's great-nephew Maurice Hood Dowell believed she had “inspired the idea of a dormitory for young girls in their freshman year at the University, as I heard her make the statement years ago that a girl during her first year from home needed special care and protection.”[2] In 1933, Alice Littlefield was the guest of honor at the dedication of the Littlefield Memorial Fountain and nine other University buildings.[3]

Alice was known by friends and relatives for being a good storyteller and amateur painter. Two of her paintings hang in the Littlefield Dormitory and two in the Littlefield House.

Later life

In 1912, at around 65 years of age, Alice Littlefield developed an unexplained "nervous condition." With apparently no cause, she developed the delusion that her whole household would be murdered and she would be kidnapped.[2] This made her prone to nervous fits of hysteria. On one occasion, she ran down the stairs screaming for her life and had to be restrained. George Littlefield wrote that when a doctor advised him to take Alice to a sanitarium, “I told him I would not think of leaving her with strangers, but I would carry her home, so I could look after her and care for her in comfort."[2] He hired three nurses, but the condition persisted for eight years.[2]

After George Littlefield died of pneumonia in 1920, Alice's nervous condition suddenly and unexpectedly improved. Now that her husband's safety was no longer a concern, she regained normal mental health and resumed an active social life. She spent much time with relatives but little in the public view.[2]

Alice Littlefield died on January 9, 1935, at age 88, and is buried in Austin's Oakwood Cemetery beside her husband. Her gravestone reads, "Beloved wife of George W. Littlefield."[3]

Haunting rumors

Rumors suggest that the ghost of Alice Littlefield haunts the residence hall named after her at the University of Texas at Austin. Residents claim to hear rattling, and sometimes singing. An annual seance to contact her is widely attended by locals, and there are multiple reports of moaning coming from the walls of the building during the ceremony. She claims to protect those "under her name", and the residents can attest to this.

gollark: There's just a lot of waste on stuff like advertising and reinventing things done by competitors which is at least theoretically avoidable.
gollark: No, we have perfectly functional competitive markets for things like food and TVs and furniture and whatever.
gollark: Central planning instead of our competitive systems could be way more efficient, except the incentives don't really work and nobody can be trusted to do it.
gollark: It's possible that I don't really like informal social/status-game-y methods of distributing things because I'm not very good at them and find them unpleasant. But I still don't really like them.
gollark: * worse

References

  1. "William Tillar", Ancestry.com. Retrieved March 17, 2013.
  2. Gracy, David B., II. “Alice P. Tillar Littlefield: Her Life.” Unpublished manuscript in progress. 2014. Print.
  3. Konczal, Lea. “Alice T. Littlefield”. Wix.com. http://texashistories.wix.com/alicelittlefield. Retrieved March 22, 2013.
  4. Troesser, John. “George Washington Littlefield”. TexasEscapes.com. Web. Retrieved March 16, 2013. http://www.texasescapes.com/TexasPersonalities/George-Washington-Littlefield.htm.
  5. David B. Gracy II, "LITTLEFIELD, GEORGE WASHINGTON," Handbook of Texas Online (http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fli18), accessed March 17, 2013. Published by the Texas State Historical Association.
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