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I had wondered what became of Lydia. She never remarried. Here's what I've learned so far:
1913-14: The UC student register for Berkeley shows Lydia Clara Plath as an undergraduate (p. 113) and Otto Emil Plath (p. 48) as a graduate student. Both live at 2216 Bancroft Way.
1915: Lydia Clara Plath, "housewife," appears in the register for UC-Berkeley summer session.
1913-14: The UC student register for Berkeley shows Lydia Clara Plath as an undergraduate (p. 113) and Otto Emil Plath (p. 48) as a graduate student. Both live at 2216 Bancroft Way.
1915: Lydia Clara Plath, "housewife," appears in the register for UC-Berkeley summer session.
1919, June 6: After three years of training, Lydia
Bartz-Plath graduates as an R.N. from the Evangelical
School of Nursing in Oak Lawn, IL. Frieda “Plath-Hendricks” was in the Class
of 1918. [Frieda's married name was actually “Heinrichs.”]
1922: Lydia has four months of post-graduate training in surgical nursing.
1925: Takes and passes the Wisconsin nursing license exam.
Lydia's nursing school closed in 1988. |
Highlights from the Eau Claire Leader, archived at Newspapers.com:
1928, April 21: Mrs.
Lydia Plath is identified as “operating nurse, Luther Hospital [Eau Claire].”
1929, June 27, p.
4, “Mrs. Lydia Plath, who has been visiting at Chicago, returned home to spend
the rest of her vacation with her mother, Mrs. Mathilde Bartz.”
1930, Sept. 8, p.
8, “Mrs. Lydia Plath has gone to Los Angeles, California, to visit her brother,
Rupert Bartz, and her sister Alma.”
1932, Aug. 12, p.
2, “Miss Elsie Roettiger [R.N.] of Fountain City [WI] arrived here Wednesday at
the Mathilde Bartz home where she will spend several days visiting with Mrs.
Lydia Plath who is spending a month’s vacation from her duties at the Luther Hospital
in Eau Claire.” [Had Lydia learned at this time that Otto Plath had divorced
her and remarried?]
1932, Oct. 22, p.
3. “Mrs. Lydia Plath motored to Oshkosh Sunday where she will attend a nurses’
convention.”
1934, Sept. 25, p.
12, operating room supervisor; on the faculty of the new Luther Hospital School of Nursing.
1934, Nov. 24, p.
2, contributes to the Eau Claire Community Welfare Fund.
1936, May 14, p.
4, named one of the Directors of the Tenth District of the Wisconsin State
Nurses Association.
1939, Sept. 15, p. 4: "Mrs. Lydia Plath described her visit to New York, including her trip to the NBC studios, Radio City, and seeing King George and Queen Elizabeth, guarded by 4000 policemen, at the World's Fair."
1942, Feb. 26, p. 2, "Lydia Plath, R.N., supervisor, shows there was a monthly average of 271.3 cases while in 1935 the average was 179."
1950, Nov. 2, p. 5, "received recognition in a monthly bulletin, 'Ideas of the Month,' published by a hospital supply company," outlining an instrument-sterilization process used at Luther Hospital.
1951, Jan. 11, p. 5, Eau Claire Daily Telegram, the article “Luther Hospital Guild Purchases New Surgical Table for Operating Room” says “Mrs. Lydia Plath, supervisor of the surgical department at Luther Hospital, demonstrated the machine."
1939, Sept. 15, p. 4: "Mrs. Lydia Plath described her visit to New York, including her trip to the NBC studios, Radio City, and seeing King George and Queen Elizabeth, guarded by 4000 policemen, at the World's Fair."
1942, Feb. 26, p. 2, "Lydia Plath, R.N., supervisor, shows there was a monthly average of 271.3 cases while in 1935 the average was 179."
1950, Nov. 2, p. 5, "received recognition in a monthly bulletin, 'Ideas of the Month,' published by a hospital supply company," outlining an instrument-sterilization process used at Luther Hospital.
1951, Jan. 11, p. 5, Eau Claire Daily Telegram, the article “Luther Hospital Guild Purchases New Surgical Table for Operating Room” says “Mrs. Lydia Plath, supervisor of the surgical department at Luther Hospital, demonstrated the machine."
1960, Jan. 19 [1]: Lydia took the annual Wisconsin nursing license renewal exam for the final time; she was 71 years old.
Rupert Bartz (1890-1934) introduced his sister Lydia to
Otto Plath. Lydia’s sisters were Alma, Dora, Odelia, and Caroline. Of all the girls, only Lydia married.
Small-town newspapers in those days reported on hunting parties, birthday parties, who checked into or out of the local hotel
or the hospital, and even the card party thrown for Rupert Bartz when he
left town in 1914 to work in real estate in North Dakota.
[1] Wisconsin Board of Nursing; Registered and Practical Nurses Permanent Record Cards, Circa 1912-1982; Series: Registered and Practical Nurses Permanent Record Cards; Book Series: 2675 or 2676