Alice was a medal awarder at the notorious
1904 Olympics in St. Louis.
By the 1950's, Longworth's health began to fail her. In 1955, she fell and suffered from a broken
hip. In 1958, Mrs. L. was found to be suffering from
breast cancer, and though successfully undergoing a
mastectomy at the time, she was again later found to have cancer in the other breast in
1970, requiring a second mastectomy. Taking the medical procedures in stride, she referred to herself as the only "topless octogenarian" in Washington. After these surgeries, Mrs. L.'s health was not as strong as it once had been but she continued a rigorous schedule and maintained her social rounds. By 1960, at age 76, after a noticable loss of weight and frail appearance with a continued cough and loss of breath, Longworth was advised by family and friends to see a
physician. She was diagnosed with
emphysema as a result of many years of heavy smoking.
Alice was a lifelong member of the
Republican party, like her father. Yet her political sympathies began to change when she became close to the Kennedy family and Lyndon Johnson. She voted Democratic in 1964, and was known to be supporting Bobby Kennedy in the 1968 Democratic primary.
It is possible her change in political leanings was the result of the social upheavals occurring in American society at the same time. Beginning in the late 1950s and continuing into the 1970s, the struggle of African Americans for social and legal equality could not have escaped the notice of a woman always known for approaching everyone she first met with respect, without regard for their station in life. As an example of her attitudes on race, in 1965 her African American chauffeur and one of her best friends, Turner, was driving Mrs. L. to an appointment. During the trip, he pulled out in front of a
taxi, and the driver got out and demanded to know of him, "What do you think you're doing you black bastard?" Turner took the insult calmly, but Mrs. L. did not and told the taxi driver, "He's taking me to my destination, you white son of a bitch!"
Yet after RFK was murdered, she again supported her friend
Richard Nixon, just as she did in his 1960 campaign against JFK. However, her long friendship with Nixon ended at the conclusion of the Watergate Scandal. Specifically, when Nixon quoted her father's diary at his resignation, by saying "Only if you've been to the lowest valley can you know how great it is to be on the highest mountain top", and other things TR wrote when Alice's mother and grandmother died. This infuriated Mrs. L, who literally spat curse words at her television screen as she watched him compare his loss - due to criminal behavior- to her young father's loss of his wife and mother on the same day due to illness.
She remained cordial with Nixon's successor,
Gerald Ford, but a minor lack of social grace on the part of
Jimmy Carter caused her to decline to ever meet the last sitting president in her lifetime.
Her last public appearance was televised nationwide on PBS. It was the 1976 Bicentennial of the United States, attended by Queen Elizabeth II of England. Joseph Alsop and other friends were taken aback when she came on the screen, escorted to the head of the receiving line by her granddaughter's close friend Robert Hellman. She had her own reception line later, greeting old friends of many years for the last time — including some old-timers from the White House kitchen staff, most of whom were African Americans.
After many years of ill health, Alice finally died in her Embassy Row home in 1980 of
emphysema, pneumonia, cardiac arrest and a number of other extended illnesses at the age of 96. Alice Roosevelt Longworth is buried in
Rock Creek Cemetery, Rock Creek Park, Washington, D.C.
Of her quotable quotes, her most famous found its way to a pillow on her settee: "If you haven't got anything good to say about anybody, come sit next to me."
http://www.salon.com/people/feature/1999/06/07/longworth/ To Senator
Joseph McCarthy she stated that the garbage men, taxi drivers and street sweepers in her neighborhood could call her by her first name, but that he could not. She also informed President
Lyndon B. Johnson that she wore wide brim hats so he couldn't kiss her. When a well-known Washington senator was discovered to have been having an affair with a young woman less than half his age, Mrs. Longworth quipped, "You can't make a soufflé rise twice."
Ironically, though Alice was Theodore Roosevelt's first-born child, she was the last of his children to die, surviving her five half-siblings from her father's second marriage.