[2] Her younger sister was author and Baháʼí Julia Lynch Olin who married twice, including to former Lieutenant Governor of New York Lewis Stuyvesant Chanler.
[3] After her mother's death in 1882 at the age of 29,[4] her father remarried to Emeline Harriman, the former wife of William Earl Dodge III, in 1903.
[12] In 1903, Alice was married to Harvard graduate Tracy "Pup" Dows (1871–1937) at her parents home in Rhinebeck, New York.
[28] Alice inherited the Olin family's sixty-acre homestead, Glenburn, in Rhinebeck, which had been enlarged by Henry Bacon and Harrie T.
[30] Deborah inherited approximately 200 acres at the southern end of Foxhollow and started a horse-riding school called Southlands.