Reitz was born in
Utica, New York on September 28, 1924. She attended the University of Buffalo for one year and the
University of Wisconsin–Madison for two years. After leaving college, she moved to
Manhattan and worked at the
Gotham Book Mart, later opening the Four Seasons, a bookstore in
Greenwich Village she operated from 1947-1956. Throughout her varied career she worked as a stockbroker, owner of a greeting card business, a college professor and a food columnist for
The Village Voice and authored a book about mushrooms titled
Mushroom Cookery. Using $10,000 she borrowed from friends, Rosetta Records was established in 1979. She would search for lost music, most often from record collectors. The music that Reitz discovered was usually in the public domain, but she would try to determine if there were any current rights and ensure that royalties were paid to the artists. She would remaster the recordings, research the background of the artists and write
liner notes. She designed the graphics for album covers and included historic photographs. While early records were shipped by mail, ultimately there were more than ten stores that carried the Rosetta label. With changes in recording media, the label switched to tapes and later CDs. Though official sales figures were never disclosed, Reitz estimated that the four "independent women's blues" compilation albums each sold 20,000 copies. The last album released came in the mid-1990s, but older releases were available online and the artists she found had been picked up by a number of mainstream recording labels. Reitz was the recipient of three awards—the Wonder Woman Award of 1982, a Grandmother Winifred grant in 1994, and the
Veteran Feminists of America in 2002 Roll of Honor for feminists writers, She died at age 84 on November 1, 2008 in
Manhattan,
New York of cardiopulmonary problems. She was survived by three daughters and a granddaughter. ==See also==