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Alice Littlefield

Alice Littlefield
Alice T. Littlefield portrait photo.jpg
Born (1846-04-10)April 10, 1846
Virginia, USA
Died January 9, 1935(1935-01-09) (aged 88)
Austin, Texas
Resting place Oakwood Cemetery in Austin
Spouse(s) George W. Littlefield (married 1863-1920, his death)
Children Two children died in infancy
Parent(s)

William Tillar

Mildred Lundy

William Tillar

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 Payne Tillar was born in Virginia on April 10, 1846, to parents William Tillar and Mildred Lundy. Her father moved the family to DeSoto County, Mississippi, where he died in 1850. After her mother's marriage to Whitfield Harral, Jr. in 1855, Alice gained three older step-brothers. In 1857, Harral moved the family to Gonzales, Texas, where Alice enrolled in Gonzales College at age 11. 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.

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. Two years later, when Littlefield was home on leave, the couple married on January 14, 1863 in Houston, Texas.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. By all accounts, the couple had a happy marriage.

Their marriage produced two children, both of whom died in infancy. 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. 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. 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.”

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.


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