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Alice Cheatham Babcock Papers 1915-1970
(bulk 1950-1970) See other finding aids available from SCL Manuscripts Division | |
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Alice Cheatham Babcock (1899-1990) was a teacher and assistant principal at Columbia High School and wife of noted author and educator Havilah Babcock.
Extent: 0.5 linear ft.
Alice Babcock worked at Columbia High School from the early days of the Depression to the mid-sixties, first as a teacher of French and mathematics, and later as assistant principal and acting principal. Several of her former students wrote to her during their service in World War II.
Both Babcocks were gardening enthusiasts, and they divided their turf according to their divergent tastes. Havilah was well-known for his vegetables, especially his tomatoes. Alice’s trademark was the camellia. Every day during the camellia’s blooming season, she would wear a fresh camellia pinned to her lapel. She also collected antique cut glass and was recognized as one of the foremost authorities on the subject in the Southeast.
A year after her death in 1990, Shandon United Methodist Church bought the Babcocks’ house with plans to use the lot for parking. The church gave the house to a Columbia women who agreed to move it. Growing on the property were dozens of stately, decades-old camellia bushes planted by Alice Babcock. The church then offered the plants to the University, which used them to establish the Havilah and Alice Babcock Memorial Garden, located between the Osborne Administration and ROTC buildings.
The papers of Alice Babcock consist primarily of correspondence with family members, as well as documentation of her education. The bulk of the material dates from 1962 - 1970.
Topical:
Cunningham, Alice
Education 1915-47
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This page updated
19 March 2004
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South Caroliniana Library |