I am beyond myself to understand how Alice could have possibly consigned herself to changing her will to leave so much to both Anna and Roy. Why? Were her reasons outlined in her revised will?
How, years before, did she concede to both Anna's and Roy's name change? What did she understand?
Was Alice perhaps a bit feeble-minded? Easily manipulated? Did they take advantage of situation? She was alone; without a mother - with a an absent father who lived far away? An ideal target?
Alice was anything but feeble minded, and she wasn't actually alone. Her Aunt Bess had been her surrogate mother since Alice was 5 years old, and was still alive when Alice disappeared. Alice was also very close to William's sister Mary. She had grown up being doted upon by her Great Uncle and his wife. And her brothers adored their little sister. I don't believe she was needy of attention or easily manipulated by others.
I think Alice really wanted a child, and she genuinely liked Anna. I believe she envisioned them living as one big, happy family when she agreed to letting Anna and Roy adopt the Parsons name.
Alice, William and Anna all changed their wills at the same time, shortly before Alice's disappearance. Anna was becoming more of a partner to them, and their wills were intended to protect each other and their business interests.
By the way, I don't know if I've mentioned it before, but Alice was wealthier by far than William. Although he was from a prominent family, he was, in my opinion, fairly weak-willed and not all that inclined to work for a living. His cousin wound up taking the position in the W. H. Parsons Paper Company that was intended for William. He drifted along from one job to the next, living more off the family name than by any sweat off his brow. He enjoyed playing lord of the manor in Stony Brook, and if everyone assumed it was his money they lived off of, so much the better as far as he was concerned.
When I first began researching this case, I posted on here that William was heir to the Standard Oil fortune. It turns out that was not correct - his sister married someone from the Pratt family, who owned much of Standard Oil. None of that money came to William.