Background
Ila Loetscher was born in 1904 in Callender, Iowa as one of a pair of twin girls.
Ila Loetscher was born in 1904 in Callender, Iowa as one of a pair of twin girls.
University of Iowa.
She received her early education in Pella, Iowa, before ultimately graduating from the University of Iowa. From her early life, Loetscher had developed in interested in engines and aviation, and she became, at the age of 25, the first licensed native Iowa female pilot. By the 1950s, her focus had changed from flying to family.
Shortly after moving to South Padre Island, Ila Loetscher developed an affection for and interest in sea turtles, which would come to define the latter half of her life.
From 1963-1967, she accompanied fellow island residents on trips to Mexico to get eggs for the endangered Kemp"s Ridley turtle that they would plant and protect on the island, and she received a state license to care for sick and injured sea turtles. In 1977, Loetscher founded “Sea Turtle, Incorporated”, a non-profit corporation focused on protecting and preserving sea turtles, particularly the Kemp’s ridley.
Her activities on behalf of the turtles gained her the nickname, “The Turtle Lady.” Ila Loetscher was inducted into the "Iowa Aviation Hall of Fame" in 1991.
At the invitation of her friend Amelia Earhart, Loetscher was one of the 99 charter members of the Ninety-Nines, an organization founded in 1929 to promote fellowship and support for female pilots.