Mueller’s green spaces aren’t just pretty – they’re a roll call of Austinites who shaped the city. (And despite what you may have read on the dark web, Lake Park is named for the body of water, not beloved 90s talk-show host, Rikki Lake.) Today we’re spotlighting the namesake of one of Mueller’s earliest parks – and its first pool – Ella Newsome Wooten.
Style, Service, and a City-Shaping Legacy
Born in 1878 in McKinney, Ella Newsome married Austin physician Goodall Harrison Wooten in 1897 and moved to the capital. Their home – started in 1898 and finished in 1900 at 1900 Rio Grande – sat just off the UT campus and quickly became a social and civic hub. In 1910, Ella led a major renovation that turned the residence into a stately Classical (Greek) Revival landmark with broad verandas and columned grandeur – architecture that mirrored Austin’s ambition as it grew from college town to small city.
Ella’s impact wasn’t confined to hosting. During World War I and World War II, she organized Austin’s Red Cross relief efforts and chaired the surgical dressings committee – gritty, hands-on work that demanded relentless volunteer coordination. Her steady leadership helped channel the city’s home-front energy into practical aid, earning her a quiet reputation for getting difficult things done.
In civic life, she pushed boundaries for women. Ella is noted as the first woman to serve on the Austin Chamber of Commerce board, a milestone that predated broader shifts in leadership across the city. Add to that her horticultural zeal – especially her famed azaleas. Accounts describe as many as 1,800 bushes on the Wooten grounds, transforming the property into a seasonal spectacle and a calling card for hospitality.
A House That Mirrors a City
After Goodall’s death in 1942, Ella sold the home in 1944. The property then cycled through lives that tracked Austin’s own evolution: a student residence hall, a recovery center, and eventually a boutique hotel – first The Mansion at Judges’ Hill, then (after a 2013 restoration) Hotel Ella. Each chapter layered new use onto a place already shaped by Ella’s taste and civic purpose.

Why Her Name Fits a Mueller Park
When Ella Wooten Park & Pool opened in 2008, it became Mueller’s first big neighborhood green – a place for everyday swim lessons, playdates, and picnics. That’s exactly the spirit of Ella’s legacy: service (Red Cross), institutional leadership (Chamber), and a welcoming, garden-forward vision of city life. In a district reborn from an airport into a walkable neighborhood, putting her name on a pool, playscape, and lawn says a lot about Austin’s values: show up, pitch in, make space for everyone.
Key Dates & Facts
- 1878: Born in McKinney, Texas
- 1897: Marries Dr. Goodall H. Wooten; moves to Austin
- 1900: Original residence at 1900 Rio Grande completed
- 1910: Transformed into a grand Greek Revival mansion
- 1944: Property sold following Goodall’s 1942 passing
- 2013: Reopens as Hotel Ella after restoration
- 2008: Ella Wooten Park & Pool opens in Mueller
References:
Texas Architect Magazine+3austintexas.gov+3Wikipedia+3
muelleraustin.com+1
The Portal to Texas History
austintexas.gov+1
Wikipedia+1
Texas Architect Magazine
📞 Interested in Becoming Part of the Mueller Community?
I love this neighborhood so much I decided to live AND work here, and there’s nothing I love more than sharing this neighborhood with more great people! If you’re interested in moving to, within, or sadly out of Mueller, I’m here for you! Give me a call at (512) 809-3497 or shoot me an email at [email protected].