Alice Fuller Murrell Colquitt

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Alice Fuller Colquitt (Murrell)

Birthdate:
Death: June 29, 1949 (83)
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Isaac Murrell and Elizabeth Rebecca Murrell
Wife of Oscar Branch Colquitt, Governor
Mother of Rosolino Murrell Colquitt; Oscar Branch Colquitt, Jr; Mary Alice Laubach; Walter F. Colquitt and Sidney B. Colquitt

Managed by: Private User
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About Alice Fuller Murrell Colquitt

Photo: Alice Colquitt is on the right

Alice Fuller Murrell Colquitt was born in Minden, Louisiana, on November 19, 1865, to parents Isaac and Rebecca (Fuller) Murrell. She had at least five siblings, including Mary, Margaret, John, Peryle, and Patsy. Alice attended Minden College in Louisiana and married future twenty-fifth Texas governor Oscar Branch Colquitt on December 9, 1885, in Pittsburg, Texas. Alice and Oscar had five children, including Rosolino “Rawlins” Murrell Colquitt; Oscar Branch Colquitt, Jr.; Mary Alice Colquitt Laubach; Sidney Burkhalter Colquitt; and Walter F. Colquitt. In 1911 their son Walter died at the age of fifteen, just before his father took office.

Alice Colquitt assisted in preparing the festivities for the unveiling of the Hood’s Texas Brigade monument in Austin, Texas, in 1910 prior to her husband taking office as governor. She served as an honorary member of the Albert Sydney Johnston Chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy (UDC) and served some time as the chapter’s president. She chaired a sub-committee of the UDC which sought to appropriate state funds for the Confederate Woman’s Home in Austin; a transfer of the home from the UDC to the state of Texas was ultimately approved by voters in 1911. She also served as the chair of the board of managers for the Confederate Woman’s Home.

Alice donated the gown she wore during the inaugural ball for the Texas governorship to the Jane Douglas Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution, and the gown is currently housed at Texas Woman’s University in Denton, Texas. She contributed to efforts that helped combat tuberculosis by participating in the establishment of tuberculosis camps across Texas. She also spent time updating the Governor’s Mansion with several new electronic appliances, and she redecorated various rooms. She was the first Texas governor’s wife to drive an automobile and was noted as an “enthusiastic motorist.” One of her recipes was later published in Carl McQueary’s Dining at the Governor’s Mansion (2003). After her husband completed his terms in office, they retired to Dallas. Alice Fuller Murrell Colquitt died on June 29, 1949, in Ardmore, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, where she likely lived with her daughter Mary’s family. She was buried next to her husband and three of her sons in Oakwood Cemetery in Austin, Texas.

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Alice Fuller Murrell Colquitt's Timeline

1865
November 19, 1865
1887
April 22, 1887
Texas, United States
1890
September 11, 1890
Texas, United States
1894
June 4, 1894
Terrell, Kaufman County, Texas, United States
1896
1896
1949
June 29, 1949
Age 83
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