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People named Alice Clark

Below are 962 people with the first name Alice and the last name Clark. Try the Clark Family page if you can't find a particular Collaborative Biography in your family tree.

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962 Alice Clark Biographies

Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Alice clark.
Alice (Clark) Kelly of Yea Australia. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Alice (Clark) Kelly .
Alice Mary (Hawker) Clark of Ballarat, City of Ballarat County, VIC Australia was born in 1895 in Ballarat to James Hawker and Eliza Hubbard Hawker. She had siblings William James Hawker, George Ernest Hawker, Frank Turner Hawker, Vera Florence Hawker, Alf Irvine Hawker, Louisa Isabel Hawker, Elsie May Hawker, Jack Gaulton Hawker, and Arthur Edward Hawker. Alice Clark married Harold Stanley Clark in 1920, and died at age 94 years old on August 17, 1990 in Ballarat.
Alice Georgina Clark of Geelong Australia was born in 1884 in Walgett, Walgett Shire County, New South Wales, and died at age 49 years old in 1933 in Kurri Kurri, Cessnock City Council County.
Alice D Clark of Bowie, Prince Georges County, MD was born on June 4, 1923, and died at age 83 years old on June 5, 2006. Alice Clark was buried at Cheltenham Veterans Cemetery Section C E2 Row 9 Site 3 11301 Crain Highway, in Cheltenham.
Alice L Clark of Spring Park, Hennepin County, Minnesota was born on July 5, 1905, and died at age 79 years old on July 25, 1984. Alice Clark was buried at Ft. Snelling National Cemetery Section Q Site 2435 7601 34th Avenue, South, in Minneapolis.
Alice Mae Clark of Dallas, Dallas County, Texas was born on March 25, 1932, and died at age 77 years old on April 8, 2009.
Alice L Clark of Cypress, Harris County, TX was born on March 17, 1924, and died at age 80 years old on June 14, 2004.
Alice M Clark of Beaumont, Jefferson County, TX was born on November 16, 1954, and died at age 52 years old on January 13, 2007.
Alice L Clark of Fort Worth, Tarrant County, TX was born on December 3, 1925, and died at age 65 years old on February 1, 1991.
Alice S Clark of Fall River, Bristol County, MA was born on March 14, 1927, and died at age 72 years old on March 2, 2000. Alice Clark was buried at Massachusetts National Cemetery Section 2 Site 1544 Off Connery Avenue, in Bourne.
Alice Foster Clark of Spearfish, Lawrence County, SD was born on November 17, 1918, and died at age 90 years old on February 8, 2009. Alice Clark was buried at Black Hills National Cemetery Section Q Site 239 20901 Pleasant Valley Drive, in Sturgis.
Alice M Clark of Middle River, Baltimore County, Maryland was born on April 4, 1907, and died at age 72 years old on February 1, 1980. Alice Clark was buried at Baltimore National Cemetery Section D Site 2688 5501 Frederick Avenue, in Baltimore.
Alice L Clark of Apollo Beach, Hillsborough County, Florida was born on April 23, 1917, and died at age 91 years old on July 22, 2008. Alice Clark was buried at Bay Pines National Cemetery Section A Site 411 P.o. Box 477, in Bay Pines.
Alice L Clark of Altona, Clinton County, NY was born on February 22, 1924, and died at age 72 years old on June 2, 1996.
Alice Clark of New York, New York County, NY was born on September 4, 1927, and died at age 69 years old on August 23, 1997. Alice Clark was buried at Calverton National Cemetery Section 17 Site 180 210 Princeton Boulevard - Rt 25, in Calverton.
Alice M Clark of Buffalo, Erie County, NY was born on April 25, 1905, and died at age 82 years old in September 1987.
Alice Clark of Geelong Australia. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Alice Clark.
Alice Rebecca Rebecca (Clark) Moore of Wangaratta Australia, was married to William Moore in 1872, and has children Alice Rosetta Maudsley, Jemima Emily Moore, George Moore, Francis Rich Moore, Albert Arthur Moore, Mary Elizabeth Moore, Edward Frederick Moore, and James Edgar Gordon Moore. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Alice Rebecca (Clark) Moore.
Alice Marie Clark Holmes of California was born on October 22, 1951, and died at age 56 years old on January 16, 2008.
Alice (Clark) Brown
Circus Aerialist. Alice Clark Brown, Black Star in a White Circus, Dies at 68 At a time when Ringling Brothers had few Black performers, she dazzled with aerial ballet and balanced on galloping elephants. Alice Clark Brown in the 1970s with Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus. She took pride in her ability to balance on elephants and never hold on, as they did headstands. By Neil Genzlinger July 23, 2021 As a young girl in Chicago in the late 1950s, Alice Clark Brown was entranced by a television show called “Circus Boy,” especially the opening montage, in which a character named Corky rides a baby elephant. “I used to really admire him riding that elephant,” she said years later. Fast-forward a few years. The child actor on the elephant, billed at the time as Mickey Braddock, became Micky Dolenz, one of the Monkees. And Ms. Brown became an elephant rider herself, with the Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus. She is thought to be the first Black showgirl in one of the Ringling Brothers’ two touring companies. Her riding feat, on a full-grown beast, was considerably more daring than Mr. Dolenz’s casual stroll. For one thing, the elephants were not strolling, as she described them in an oral history recorded at a 2017 reunion of circus performers. “The number was called ‘The Cakewalk Jamboree,’ and the elephants would come galloping out,” she said, adding, “Then they would stand on their hind legs, so you were on the elephants, and you were way up high.” And then the elephants would pivot earthward into a headstand, the rider rocketing forward with her animal. In other circuses, a rider might grab the harness to maintain balance, but not in the Ringling arena. Photographs from the time show Ms. Brown triumphantly astride her headstanding elephant, arms raised high, her elaborate headdress perfectly in place. “I had to learn how to let centrifugal force work with that so that I could stay on and never hold on, never never,” she said. Ms. Brown dazzled audiences with her aerial ballet act, but before she could perform, she had to train to get over her fear of heights. The effect was striking. “It looks like I’m defying gravity,” she said. Ms. Brown died on June 6 at her home in Oak Park, Ill. She was 68. Her husband, Geoffrey F. Brown, said the cause was interstitial lung disease. Ms. Brown was with the circus only from 1971 to 1974, but she was celebrated both for her arena acrobatics — she danced high above the ground in aerial ballets — and for breaking a barrier. “I think the circus is fun and I’m glad to be here, not only for myself but for Blacks in general,” she told The Daily News of Philadelphia in 1972. “It is important that they be represented in every aspect of American life.” Alice Ruth Clark was born on Aug. 22, 1952, in Chicago. Her father, Charles, worked at Libby, McNeill & Libby, the canned-goods company, and her mother, Mattie (Miller) Clark, was a homemaker. She graduated from DuSable High School in Chicago in 1969 and was a student at the University of Illinois when, in 1971, the circus came to the International Amphitheater in Chicago. She was working there as an usher, and the interest she had developed watching “Circus Boy” was reignited. Over time Ms. Brown became something of a public face for the circus, doing interviews with newspapers and with Barbara Walters on the “Today” show. Ms. Brown tried out, and in December 1971 she joined the circus, leaving college behind for the moment. She was sent to the circus’s training ground in Florida, where Antoinette Concello (I also gave her a tribute on ancientfaces several years ago), a famed performer who was then aerial director for the circus, helped her improve her dancing and overcome her fear of heights. “Mrs. Concello said, ‘Now if you don’t learn these tricks, girl, we’re going to have to send you home,’” she said in the oral history. “I was like, ‘Oh, no, I can’t let that happen.’ I started practicing extra hard until finally, I finally did the tricks along with all the other girls, way up high.” She began performing in shows in 1972. She also became something of a public face for the circus, doing interviews with newspapers and with Barbara Walters on the “Today” show. Ms. Brown was a rare Black star in the Ringling arena at the time. In the 19th century, P.T. Barnum had used Black performers odiously, exhibiting them freak-show style; almost a century later, few had been elevated to star status. At the time Ms. Brown joined, the circus had two different troupes touring, the Red Unit and the Blue. The Red Unit had a Black showgirl, Jackie Walker, but Ms. Brown is believed to have been the first Black showgirl to be hired in the Blue group, Heidi Connor, chief archivist at the John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art in Sarasota, Fla., told The Chicago Sun-Times. “When I first joined, it was kind of funny,” Ms. Brown told The Daily News of Philadelphia seven months into the job. “Some people acted like they didn’t like Black people. Now everybody has gotten used to me, and things are much better.” Some of Ms. Brown’s fondest memories of her circus days were exploring cities where the show stopped, including New York, Detroit, Baltimore and Houston. Some of Ms. Brown’s fondest memories of her circus days were exploring cities where the show stopped, including New York, Detroit, Baltimore and Houston.Credit...via Brown family Touring the South, she occasionally experienced the kinds of discrimination familiar to earlier generations of Black performers. “I noticed those confederate flags and the John Birch Society signs,” she said in the oral history. “I thought, ‘Careful, be very careful.’ Sure enough, there were places there in the South, a couple of places, that wouldn’t serve me.” Most of her memories, though, were pleasant, she said. She especially enjoyed her time on the circus train and exploring cities where the show stopped. Her younger sister, Anna Clark, joined her in New York, Detroit, Baltimore, Houston and elsewhere, and they would travel around town together. “She would say, ‘Hey, this is an interesting looking place; why don’t you come see me?’” Ms. Clark said in a phone interview. “I took my first plane ride because of her.” “The world was our oyster,” she added. “We were trying to find out how many pearls we could locate.” Ms. Brown left the circus after the 1974 season, thinking she might travel to Europe and sign on with a small circus there. But when her mother had a stroke, that plan fell by the wayside. Soon after, while working as a tour guide at Johnson Publishing in Chicago, she met Mr. Brown, who was on the staff of its Jet magazine. They married in 1977. (Mr. Brown became a top editor at The Chicago Tribune.) While raising a family, Ms. Brown dabbled in other types of performing in the Chicago area, appearing in plays, playing piano and singing and appearing as an extra in a few movies. Ms. Brown in 2017 at a reunion of Ringling Brothers alumni. With her are the former clowns Steve Smith, left, and Chris Bricker.Credit...Geoffrey F. Brown Sr. Mr. Brown said that when his wife would talk about her circus years, “she was quite proud of how strong she had become.” “She was always, ‘I got so nice and muscular,’” he said in a phone interview. He said she was dismayed at the animal-rights protest that cast the circus in a bad light in later years, since she had never witnessed any mistreatment. Some three decades after she had interrupted her collegiate studies, she returned to school, earning an English degree at the University of Illinois at Chicago in 2004. In addition to her husband and her sister, Ms. Brown is survived by a son, Geoffrey Jr.; a daughter, Christina L. Brown; and a brother, Gerry Clark. Anna Clark said that, more than once, Ms. Concello, the aerial director, had asked if she wanted to join Alice in the circus. They could work up a sister act, she suggested. But she knew she was no Alice. “I had to remind her that I get a nosebleed from getting up on a stepladder,” she said. “I just wasn’t that brave. I wasn’t as brave as her.”
Alice Clark of Atlanta, Fulton County, Georgia was born on February 17, 1891, and died at age 85 years old in January 1977.
Alice Mae (Schermerhorn) Clark was born in April 1946, and died in Seattle, King County, Washington United States. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Alice Mae (Schermerhorn) Clark.
Alice B Clark of Gardena, Los Angeles County, CA was born on March 14, 1933, and died at age 67 years old on November 24, 2000. Alice Clark was buried at Bay Pines National Cemetery Section E Site 426 P.o. Box 477, in Bay Pines, Fl.
Alice C Clark of Corona, Riverside County, CA was born on November 6, 1914, and died at age 87 years old on July 15, 2002. Alice Clark was buried at Riverside National Cemetery Section 45 Site 2826 22495 Van Buren Boulevard, in Riverside.
Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Alice Datton Clark.
Alice Clark died in December 1970. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Alice Clark.
Alice M Clark was born on February 8, 1936, and died at age 76 years old on January 1, 2013. Alice Clark was buried at National Memorial Cemetery Of Arizona Section 34 Site 22 23029 North Cave Creek Road, in Phoenix, Az. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Alice M Clark.
Alice H Clark was born on February 12, 1913, and died at age 75 years old on June 22, 1988. Alice Clark was buried at Garrison Forest Veterans Cemetery Section D-3 Row 18 Site 3 11501 Garrison Forest Rd, in Owings Mills, Md. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Alice H Clark.
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