Iowa Women's Archives
University of Iowa Libraries
Iowa City, Iowa

 

BETTY RUGEN SCHUTTER (1917- )

PAPERS, 1937-1980
9 linear inches

 

Iowa Women's Archives
100 Main Library
University of Iowa Libraries
Iowa City, Iowa 52242

Phone: 319-335-5068
Fax: 319-335-5900
E-mail the Iowa Women's Archives

Please cite materials from this collection as follows:
Betty Schutter Rugen Papers, Iowa Women's Archives, University of Iowa Libraries, Iowa City, Iowa.

 


Collection Overview

 
Acquisition:
The papers (donor no. 771) were donated by Betty Rugen Schutter in 2001 and subsequent years.
 
 
Access:
The papers are open for research.
 
 
Copyright:
Copyright held by the donor has been transferred to The University of Iowa.
 
 
Processed by:
Ashley Goulden, 2006. [SchutterBetty.doc]
 

Biography

Speech therapist Betty Rugen Schutter was born in Evanston, Illinois, in 1917.  Her mother died in 1920, and Betty Rugen was sent to live on her aunt’s farm until her father’s remarriage reunited the family.  Rugen and her father, stepmother, and older sister lived in Glenview, Illinois, where her father was a partner in the family’s general store.  Rugen attended Glenview District 34 School and New Trier High School.  Inspired by speech teacher Maybelle Payton, she decided to pursue a career in speech pathology.

In 1937, Rugen moved to Iowa to attend the State University of Iowa (now the University of Iowa), where she lived in Currier Hall and studied speech pathology.  In 1939, she transferred to Washington University for one semester, but returned to Iowa and completed her bachelor’s degree in 1941.  During her collegiate career, she wrote many letters to her parents detailing her experiences at the State University of Iowa, including her interactions with African-American students.
           
Following college, Rugen was hired to teach fifth grade and speech at the South Dakota School for the Deaf, where she remained for one year.  In 1942, she married John Maurice Schutter, M.D., and moved to Algona, Iowa, where in addition to rearing five children, she maintained a private speech therapy practice in her home.  Schutter participated in many organizations, including the League of Women Voters, and worked for the failed 1980 campaign to pass a state Equal Rights Amendment in Iowa.  After her husband’s death in 1984, Schutter continued to volunteer with the Crisis Center Food Bank the Free Lunch Program, and other organizations in her new residence, Coralville, Iowa.


Scope and Content Note

The Betty Rugen Schutter papers date from 1937 to 1980 and measure 9 linear inches.  They include four notebooks of letters Betty Rugen wrote to her parents while she was a student at the State University of Iowa; these letters are organized in folders for each year of her collegiate career.  A scrapbook containing memorabilia from her years at the State University of Iowa is also included.  Two folders of materials related to the campaign to pass the state ERA in Iowa in 1980 complete the collection


Box List

Box 1                  
  Letters to parents
         
    1937-1939
1940-1941
         
  ERA Resource Packets, 1980          
                   
Oversize:          
Box 2                  
  Scrapbook, 1937-1941          

 


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Page created April 2007.