Tusch maintained a register of visitors to her home, as well as a birthday book on which she recorded the birthdays of visitors. Visitors would also sign her wallpaper, including signatures from
Charles Lindbergh and
Eddie Rickenbacker. The students who visited her would go on to flight school and then to the various theatres of
World War I and
World War II, and would send her back aeronautical memorabilia, which collected in her cottage. Some examples of objects in her collection include what was claimed to be a piece of the wreckage of the
Hindenburg, a propeller from the first flight between
San Francisco and
Oakland, a cloth cap worn by
Richard E. Byrd, a protective helmet worn by
Henry H. Arnold, a gasoline cap, fabric, a spare hose, and a drain plug. She also maintained correspondence with many of these former cadets. Her collection also includes both formal and informal photographs and images signed by famous aviators, including
Ruth Law and
Earle Ovington. == Later life and death ==