Lucy Luise Martha Mensing was born in
Hamburg. Her parents were the merchant Hermann Mensing and his wife Martha. In Tübingen she met the physicist Wilhelm Schütz (1900–1972). He had received his doctorate from
Walther Gerlach, and dealt experimentally with spectroscopy. Later he was a professor in
Jena. At the time they met, he was assistant to
Walther Gerlach. The two married in 1928. After the birth of her first son in 1930, she ended her scientific career and mainly took care of her family. She had a second son and two daughters. Lucy Mensing continued to follow what was happening in physics, maintained contacts with colleagues, and supported her husband in his work, for example by preparing scripts for his lectures. As a contribution to her husband's 1936
Handbuch der Experimentalphysik, she wrote a section on the quantum mechanical theory of the
Faraday effect. She had a lifelong friendship with
Ernst Ising. The family moved to
Munich in 1929 and to
Königsberg in 1936. Shortly before the end of the Second World War, they fled to
Jena, where Wilhelm Schütz had set up a branch of his institute. During this difficult time, Lucy Schütz gleaned (picking up crops) and worked as a cleaning lady. In March 1946 she found a job in Jena as a trainee assistant at the mathematical institute. In October 1946, the Soviets deported the family to an island in
Lake Seliger near
Ostashkov as part of the
Operation Osoaviakhim. There Lucy Schütz worked as a teacher for German and history at a school for the children of German internees. In June 1952 the family was able to return to Jena. Lucy Schütz died on April 28, 1995, in
Meiningen, Germany. == Publications ==