Career
After graduation, she taught the balance of the school year in the Marshalltown public schools and the next year acted as principal of the Webster City high school.[4][3][2] She also served on the Webster City board of education.[1]
In July 1892, she married Llewellyn V. Harpel (d. 1936),[1] an attorney at law, and they lived in Perry for eleven years. Her only son, Gates, was born in 1893.[3][2]
During her residence in Perry, she filled for six months a vacancy as high-school teacher.[3][2] In 1895, she was elected by popular election to the Perry school board,[6] and served for three years, wherein she assisted in organizing the Wednesday Study Club, which continued to exist after she left her position on the board.[3][2] After running again in 1906, Harpel was defeated.[7]
With her husband busy with his law practice, Harpel decided to study medicine.[1] After graduating from the medical department of Drake University,[1] where she was matriculated, she began the regular practice of medicine in 1902 at her home in Perry.[8] A misunderstanding arose in the minds of some from the fact that Harpel took a course of study at the Still College of Osteopathy additional to the regular course of study at the Iowa College of Physicians and Surgeons (Allopath). A newspaper article in The Perry Chief clarified that Harpel would practice medicine and not osteopathy; her studies in osteopathy were only for the purpose to further equip her in means of diagnosis and the judging as to the merits of osteopathy for particular cases, as one of the available remedies.[9] Harpel relocated to Boone in 1903.[3][2] When she started her practice, she made house calls with a horse and buggy, before progressing to the use of a
Subsequent to World War I, the government asked women to cooperate during January and February 1919 in a campaign for social hygiene. A lecture tour covering Iowa cities of over 10,000 inhabitants was organized and concluded in March in Des Moines. The lecture staff of women physicians included Harpel as well as Dr. Jeannette Throckmorton, Dr. Velura Powell, Dr. Josephine Rust, Dr. Lenna Meanes, Dr. Nelle Noble, and Dr. Mae Habenicht.[13]
Harpel was involved in several organizations. She was a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution,[14] and was active in the Political Equality Club and the Civic League. She was an organizer of the Outlook Club, serving for two years as its president. Harpel was a past commander of the Ladies of the Maccabees and a past Worthy Matron of the Order of the Eastern Star.[3]
Harpel was active in the cause of women's suffrage. She served as the chair of Iowa's Equal Suffrage Association; when the Nineteenth Amendment passed in 1920, Harpel was the organization's vice president.[5][15]