
IOWA WOMEN’S ARCHIVES
UNIVERSITY OF IOWA LIBRARIES
IOWA CITY, IOWA
IOLA VANDER WILT (1930- )
PAPERS, 1963-1973
4 linear inches
|
ACQUISITION: |
The papers
(donor no. 647) were donated by Iola Vander Wilt in 1999. |
|
ACCESS: |
The papers
are open for research. |
|
COPYRIGHT: |
Copyright has been transferred to the University of Iowa. |
|
PHOTOGRAPHS: |
In box 1. |
|
PROCESSED BY: |
Doris Malkmus, 2001. [VanderWiltI.doc] |
Biography
Iola Marinus Vander Wilt, farmer, pilot, and bed and breakfast owner, was born to Henry and Agnes Marinus on a Polk County farm in 1930. In 1934, the Marinuses lost their corn crop to the drought and struggled, like many Iowa farmers, to feed and clothe their children. Iola Marinus graduated from Prairie City High School and attended American Institute of Business in Des Moines for a year before marrying Alvin Vander Wilt. The Vander Wilts moved to Alvin Vander Wilt’s parents’ dairy farm near Leighton, Iowa, where they raised four children, Gloria, Marion, Mark, and Judy.
Alvin Vander Wilt was active in the American Dairy Association of Iowa, serving as president in the early 1960s. The frequent travel this position required led him to become a licensed pilot and buy his own plane. Consequently, both Alvin and Iola became active members of the Flying Farmers of Iowa. They were named Flying Farmer of the Year in 1965 and Iola Vander Wilt became the Region Four director--the first woman elected to the state board of the Flying Farmers of Iowa. She had become a licensed pilot in 1965 and initiated a “Ladies Land-it” workshop to teach women how to land planes. In 1966, she won awards from Piper Aircraft and Lycoming Motors (Cessna Aircraft) for her outstanding flight achievements as a woman flyer. In1968 and 1969 when the Vander Wilt children were old enough to learn to fly, Iola sponsored a flying teens program in Iowa. She was elected Queen of the Flying Farmers of Iowa at the state convention in Ottumwa in 1970 and hosted the International Flying Farmers Convention in Ames in 1971. During her year as queen, she promoted the Flying Farmers as well as airport development. Despite her interest in promoting the Flying Farmers, she did not seek the position of national queen because of the cost of flying to various state conventions.
Alvin and Iola Vander Wilt continued flying until Alvin Vander Wilt’s ill health stopped them in 1978. They spent many vacations in the air with their children, attending conventions around the country. In 1983, Iola Vander Wilt redecorated the farmhouse and opened it as a bed and breakfast. After Alvin Vander Wilt died in 1994, Iola Vander Wilt remained on the farm, renting out half of the land and farming the other half with her son Mark. She remarried February 28, 2000 and continued to reside at the farm and operate the bed and breakfast.
Scope and
Content Note
The Iola Vander Wilt papers date
from 1963 to 1973 and measure 4
linear inches. The collection consists
primarily of planning arrangements for the 1970 International Flying Farmers
convention hosted by the Iowa chapter, plus cards, photographs, and newspaper
clippings about her service as the 1970 Queen of the Flying Farmers of
Iowa. The collection is divided into
three series, Flying Farmer Conventions;
Activities; and Photographs. The Flying
Farmer Convention series contains programs, planning files, newsclippings and
cards for a variety of national and state conventions. The Projects
series includes of newsletters with columns written by Iola Vanderwilt and
other promotional material. The
Photograph series consists of a few photographs from conventions and activities
and the coronation of Iola Vander Wilt as Queen of the Flying Farmers of Iowa
in 1970.
Box no. Description
Box 1
Iowa,
1970
Missouri,
1970
International
1963,
1965, 1970
Plans,
1970
Planning
notebooks, 1970
Cards,
1970
Flying
Farmer of Iowa newsletter, 1970-1971
Flying
teens, undated
Ladies
Land-it, 1965
Promotional
material, 1969-1970
Flying
saucer sightings, 1970
“8
Steps to Airport Development,” 1970
Photographs, 1970 and undated