Ludel Boden
Sauvageot, 1906-1996
In 1927, Ludel
Boden Sauvageot became the first female graduate of the prestigious
E.W. Scripps School of Journalism at Ohio University. Shortly thereafter,
Sauvageot set out to make an impact in the public relations field and
beyond.
In the 1930s, her
public relations position for a large Methodist Mission group took her
to the slums of Cuba and the hills of Appalachia. In 1946, she organized
the first hospital public relations program in Ohio at Akron General
Hospital (now Akron General Medical Center), where her husband, Dr.
J. Paul Sauvageot, worked. She remained with the hospital for the next
30 years.
Sauvageot is perhaps
best known for her treatment of the younger generation of public relations
professionals. She advised, mentored and counseled many young people
entering the field and remained a role model for both aspiring and practicing
public relations professionals and journalists everywhere. The Ludel
Sauvageot Scholarship is still awarded annually to an outstanding public
relations major in Kent State’s School of Journalism and Mass
Communication. The Akron Press Club recently created another scholarship
in her name. It was given for the first time in 2003 to the top Public
Relations college student in the five-county area.
During her more
than six-decade career, she upheld the highest standards of public relations
and served as president of the Akron chapter of the Public Relations
Society of America and Kent State University’s Public Relations
Council. She was president of the Akron chapter of Women in Communications
and served on the Akron Press Club Board.
Sauvageot was the
author of four books: A Matter of Heart: The History of the American
Heart Association in Akron, Ohio, from its Founding in 1950 through
May 1995 (1995); Partners in History: The Story of Ohio Hospitals
and the Ohio Hospital Association (1992); Service for All:
The Story of Akron General Medical Center, 1914-1977 (1977); and
Service for All: The Story of Akron General Medical Center, 1914-1986
(1986).
Sauvageot “retired”
from Akron General Hospital at the age of 70, but returned soon after
as a public relations consultant. She was inducted into the Ohio
Women's Hall of Fame in 1990.
Sauvageot died on
April 18, 1996 in Akron. She left two sons, Andre and Jules.
--Zachary
Jackson
