The Real Alice in Wonderland
Her name was Alice Pleasance Liddell ...
Alice Liddell was born in 1852 and the third child of the Dean from the Christ Church College in Oxford, where a young Charles Lutwidge Dodgson worked. On the 25th of April in 1856, Mr. Dodgson went with a borrowed camera to photograph the Christ Church Cathedral. He had no luck with his pictures but he did find in the garden the three daughters of the Dean. This was his first meeting with Alice, who was one week away from her fourth birthday.
This meeting and the purchase of his own camera equipment was the start to a unique friendship between Dodgson and the Liddell children. Alice in particular, was about to inspire him to become not only a photographer and companion but an author of rare genius as well.
Photography was only one aspect of the friendship with the Liddell children. Dodgson escorted them to the University Museum, The Botanical Gardens, The Magdalen College Deer Park or they would walk through the town to Folly Bridge and rent a boat to row up and down the River Isis (the stretch of the Thames which flowed through Oxford.)
In later years Alice recalled that "When we went on the river ... with Mr. Dodgson ... he always bought out with him a large basket full of cakes and a kettle. On rarer occasions we went out for the whole day with him and then we took a larger basket with luncheon ... cold chicken and salad and all sorts of good things. One of our favourite whole-day excursions was to row down to Nuneham and picnic in the woods there".
It was on a Tuesday in June 1862 that Dodgson organised such a party to picnic at Nuneham. Along with his sisters, Fanny and Elizabeth and their Aunt Lucy, who were visiting at the time, the group also included the three Liddell sisters and Dodgson's friend Robinson Duckworth. After spending the day walking in the park the group was caught in a sudden rainstorm. The adventure ended with evening tea in Dodgson's rooms.
This damp outing would long have been forgotten but for its later transformation in Alice in Wonderland where Alice found herself in a pool of her own tears. In the tale the party becomes a congregation of birds: Lorina became the Lory, Edith the Eaglet, Duckworth became the Duck and Dodgson, turned himself into the Dodo, whose name sounded like Do-do-dodgson's when he stammered.
In 1880, Alice married Reginald Hargreaves. When Alice's husband died in 1928, she needed money to pay death duties and sold the original Alice In Wonderland manuscript. Sotheby's suggested a reserve of only £4000 but it fetched a staggering £15,400 (an enormous amount of money for those days). The story then went to America.
In 1932, when she was 80, Alice published her memoirs but died two years later, on 15 November 1934. Since then, the script “Alice in Wonderland" has been translated into over 125 different languages and there have been literally hundreds of editions. Alice Liddell's son started collecting various editions in the 1920’s and when he died he left a staggering collection of 250 different versions.