
IOWA WOMEN’S ARCHIVES
UNIVERSITY OF IOWA LIBRARIES
IOWA CITY, IOWA
RUTH WILSON (1924-2002)
2.5 linear inches
|
ACQUISITION: |
The papers (donor no. 863) were donated by
Bu Wilson and Joseph Gingery in 2002. |
|
|
ACCESS: |
The papers are open for
research. |
|
|
COPYRIGHT: |
Copyright held by the
donor has been transferred to the University of Iowa. |
|
|
PROCESSED BY: |
Andrea Sheehan, 2003. [WilsonRuth.doc] |
|
Biography
Ruth Wilson was born on July 11,
1924 in Wayne, Nebraska. She attended
grade school in Wayne, until the Wilson family moved to Iowa so her father
could receive his doctorate degree. While
attending high school in Iowa City, Wilson was introduced to journalism and
held several positions pertaining to the subject, including state president of
the high school journalism group.
Wilson attended the University of Iowa, and began working at the Daily
Iowan. After graduating from the
University of Iowa with a Baccalaureate of Arts degree, she was hired as the
telegraph editor for the Cedar Valley Daily Times in Vinton, Iowa, and
then at the Telegraph Herald in Dubuque, Iowa. Here she served as a reporter, assistant state editor, and then
the state editor. Developing a desire
to travel, Wilson obtained a position in Germany for Stars and Stripes,
the Army newspaper. Wilson lived in
Darmstadt where she gained experience and traveled the European continent. Upon returning to the U.S., Wilson was hired
at the Milwaukee Journal, and remained there for twenty-five years,
eventually working her way up to the contact editor position.
Wilson married Joe Gingery, a
widower with whom she had worked at the Milwaukee Journal, on August 31,
1980, and they both kept their original last names. They traveled around the world together between the years 1989 to
2000, and together compiled a book, The Forty Best Exotic Trips on the
Planet. Wilson died unexpectedly on
July 16, 2002.
Scope and Content Note
The Ruth Wilson papers date from 1957 to 2002 and measure
2.5 linear inches. The papers are
comprised of correspondence and the book The Forty Best Exotic Trips on the
Planet. The correspondence dates
from 1957 to 1959, and contains letters to her parents from Germany where
Wilson worked for the Stars and Stripes. The letters and postcards contain observations of Post-War
Europe, and information concerning her professional life. The Forty Best Exotic Trips on the Planet
is a compilation of journal entries and photographs of Wilson and her
husband’s many worldwide experiences between 1989 and 2000. The collection includes Wilson’s obituary
and a memorial testimony given by Joseph Gingery.
Box no. Description
Box 1
“Stars and Stripes” informational booklet
Correspondence to parents
1957
January-August 1958
September 1958-April 1959
Postcards, 1957-58, undated
The
Forty Best Exotic Trips on the Planet
Obituaries and memorials, 2002