A Notable Woman
Elizabeth Pfiffner Debot
Elizabeth Pfiffner DeBot, dean of women at Wisconsin
State University for 25 years, retired in 1965, saying she would miss her
contacts with students. "I’ve thoroughly enjoyed working with young
people. It gives me such a thrill each commencement, to see the students who
have struggled financially and scholastically to get their education,
finally succeed."
Upon her retirement, the university named one of the
residence hall dining facilities in her honor. In 1967 at the
dedication of the DeBot Center, Professor Bertha Glennon said this about her
colleague who was being honored: "Over the 25 years of her deanship here,
I saw her genuine interest in the students, her warmth of personality, her
constant giving of herself to others who needed help, her wise solution of
student problems and her integrity."
A Stevens Point native, DeBot was an alumna of UWSP
who earned a master’s degree in counseling from University of Madison. She was
one of the organizers and first officers of the UWSP Foundation and for her
first three years on campus, director of Nelson Hall. When that women’s
dormitory was converted into a barracks for air corpsmen who trained on campus
during World War II, she was in charge of USO canteen activities for which
campus women students served as hostesses.
She was married to Anton Pfiffner in 1930. He died in
1931.
In 1965, she married Elmer DeBot, president of Point
Sporting Goods. He died in 1981. She was active in the League of Women Voters,
the Progress Club, Business and Professional Women’s Club and the Wisconsin
State Deans’ Association.
In 1969 she was one of the first recipients of the Distinguished Alumni Award given by UWSP. She died in
1983 in Northbrook, Ill., where she had been living with her
daughter. Each year since her death, a scholarship has been given in her name
to a high-achieving nontraditional student.