Alice Pleasance Liddell (4 May 1852 – 16 November 1934);
Known for most of her adult life by her married name,
Alice Hargreaves, inspired the children's classic
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland by
Lewis Carroll, whose protagonist
Alice was named after her. Her family surname
Liddell is pronounced
/ˈlɪdəl/.
Biography
Alice Liddell was the fourth child of
Henry Liddell,
Dean of
Christ Church, Oxford, and his wife Lorina Hanna Liddell (
née Reeve). She had two older brothers, Harry (born 1847) and Arthur (born 1850, died of
scarlet fever in 1853), and an older sister Lorina (born 1849). She also had six younger siblings, including her sister Edith (born 1854) with whom she was very close.
Liddell grew up primarily in the company of the two sisters nearest to her in age: Lorina, who was three years older, and Edith, who was two years younger. She and her family regularly spent holidays at their holiday home Penmorfa, which later became the Gogarth Abbey Hotel, on the West Shore of
Llandudno in
North Wales.
When
Alice Liddell was a young woman, she set out on a grand tour of
Europe with Lorina and Edith. One story has it that she became a romantic interest of
Prince Leopold, the youngest son of
Queen Victoria, during the four years he spent at Christ Church, but the evidence for this is sparse. It is true that years later, Leopold named his first child
Alice, and acted as godfather to Alice's second son Leopold. (A recent biographer of Leopold suggests it is far more likely that Alice's sister Edith was the true recipient of Leopold's attention.
[1]) Edith died on 26 June 1876,
[2] possibly of
measles or
peritonitis (accounts differ), shortly before she was to be married to Aubrey Harcourt, a cricket player.
[3] At her funeral on 30 June 1876, Prince Leopold served as a pall-bearer.
Alice Liddell married
Reginald Hargreaves, also a cricket player, on 15 September 1880, at the age of 28 in
Westminster Abbey. They had three sons: Alan Knyveton Hargreaves and Leopold Reginald "Rex" Hargreaves (both were killed in action in
World War I); and Caryl Liddell Hargreaves, who survived to have a daughter of his own. Liddell denied that the name 'Caryl' was in any way associated with Charles Dodgson's pseudonym. Reginald Hargreaves inherited a considerable fortune, and Alice became a noted society hostess.
After her husband's death, the cost of maintaining their home, Cuffnells, was such that she deemed it necessary to sell her copy of
Alice's Adventures Under Ground. The manuscript fetched £15,400, nearly four times the
reserve price given it by
Sotheby's auction house. It later became the possession of Eldridge R. Johnson and was displayed at
Columbia University on the centennial of Carroll's birth. (Alice was present, aged 80, and it was on this visit to America that she met
Peter Llewelyn-Davies, one of the brothers who inspired
J. M. Barrie's
Peter Pan). Upon Johnson's death, the book was purchased by a consortium of American bibliophiles and presented to the British people "in recognition of Britain's courage in facing Hitler before America came into the war." The manuscript now resides in the
British Library.
Late in life, she lived in and around
Lyndhurst in the
New Forest, After her death she was cremated and her ashes were buried in the graveyard of the church of St. Michael & All Angels, Lyndhurst (a memorial plaque, naming her "Mrs. Reginald Hargreaves" can be seen in the picture in the monograph).
Origin of Alice in Wonderland
On 4 July 1862, in a
rowing boat travelling on
the Isis from
Folly Bridge,
Oxford to
Godstow for a picnic outing, 10-year-old Alice asked
Charles Dodgson (who wrote under the
pen name Lewis Carroll) to entertain her and her sisters, Edith (age 8) and Lorina (age 13), with a story. As the Reverend
Robinson Duckworth rowed the boat, Dodgson regaled the girls with fantastic stories of a girl, named Alice, and her adventures after she fell into a rabbit-hole. The story was not unlike those Dodgson had spun for the sisters before, but this time Liddell asked Mr. Dodgson to write it down for her. He promised to do so but did not get around to the task for some months. He eventually presented her with the manuscript of
Alice's Adventures Under Ground in November 1864.
In the meantime, Dodgson had decided to rewrite the story as a possible commercial venture. Probably with a view to canvassing his opinion, Dodgson sent the manuscript of
Under Ground to a friend, the author
George MacDonald, in the spring of 1863.
[5] The MacDonald children read the story and loved it, and this response probably persuaded Dodgson to seek a publisher.
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, with illustrations by
John Tenniel, was published in 1865, under the name Lewis Carroll. A second book about the character Alice,
Through the Looking-Glass and What Alice Found There, followed in 1871. In 1886, a facsimile of
Alice's Adventures Under Ground, the original manuscript that Dodgson had given Liddell, was published.
(source : www.wikipedia.org)