Alice E. Brown (May 11, 1912 – February 1, 1973) was a member of the Kenaitze Tribe of Dena'ina peoples, who worked for Native Alaskan rights.
[4] Brown served her community in various capacities, including as a field representative of the Kenaitze Indian Association and as a member of the Rural Affairs Commission Greater Anchorage Area Borough Advisory Health Board, and the National Congress of American Indians (NCAI).
[6] In 1967, Brown was appointed by Governor Walter Hickel to serve on the Task Force on Land Claims.
[7] The committee made their recommendations in 1968 and requested hearings to be held to approve distribution of land in fee simple to native villages with protected hunting and fishing rights for 100 years, shares in mineral rights to be paid to natives for specified lands and the organization of business corporations to disburse funds for tribal interests.
[3] Posthumously, in 2000, a collection of manuscripts and archival materials about her and her father was donated to the Anchorage Museum Atwood Resource Center by John "Eddy" Brown[11] and in 2009, Brown's personal papers regarding her work on land rights issues was donated to the University of Alaska by her granddaughter, Rebecca Lyon.