Joseph H. Romig
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Dr. Joseph Herman Romig (1872 - 1951) was a frontier physician and Moravian Church missionary, who served as Mayor of Anchorage, Alaska from 1937-1938.
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[edit] Biography
[edit] Family and missionary work
Joseph H. Romig was born September 3, 1872 in Edwards County, Illinois to Joseph and Margaret Ricksecker Romig, both the descendants of Moravian immigrants who had settled in Tuscarawas County, Ohio. He grew up with nine brothers and sisters on the Chippewa Mission Farm near Independence, Kansas. The Moravian Church sponsored his medical training at the Hahnemann Medical School in Philadephia in exchange for a pledge to serve for seven years as a doctor at a mission. At school, he met Ella Mae Ervin of Kingston, Pennsylvania, who was studying nursing.
In 1896, Joseph and Ella were married, and the couple moved to Bethel, Alaska to join Joseph's older sister Edith Margaret and her husband John Henry Kilbuck as missionaries to the Yup'ik people. Joseph and Ella had four children: Robert Herman (b. 1897), Margaret Maryetta (b. 1898), Jean Elizabeth (b. 1900), and Howard Glenmore (b. 1911). For a time, Romig was one of the only physicians in Alaska. He became known as the "dog team doctor" for traveling by dog sled throughout the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta in the course of his work.
[edit] Career
In 1903, with his term of missionary service complete, Romig relocated the family to San Francisco, California. He was there for the San Francisco Earthquake of 1906, and ran an emergency hospital in the aftermath. In 1906, he moved back to Alaska to take a job as a company physician in Nushagak. He also worked for a time as a United States Commissioner before moving to Seward to open a small hospital.
In the 1920s, he worked as chief surgeon at the St. Joseph's Hospital in Fairbanks before setting up a hospital in Nenana for the Alaska Railroad. In 1930, he was asked to head the Alaska Railroad Hospital in Anchorage. When his son, Howard, returned from Stanford University Medical School, they went into private practice together.
Joseph Romig was elected Mayor of Anchorage in 1937, serving a single term. The same year, Ella Mae Ervin Romig died. In 1939, he was remarried to Emily Craig, who had worked as chief of nursing at the railroad hospital.
In 1939, Romig was appointed chief surgeon at Anchorage's newly-constructed Providence Hospital at Ninth and L Street. He retired shortly thereafter, purchasing land on what would later be called Romig Hill. From his log cabin on the property, he started a "Board of Directors" club which eventually provided the founding members of the Anchorage Rotary Club.
[edit] Death and Legacy
Joseph and Emily Romig moved to Colorado Springs, Colorado, where Joseph died in 1951. Although he was originally buried in Colorado, his remains were later disinterred and moved to Alaska to be buried in the family plot in Anchorage Memorial Park Cemetery. Romig Junior High School, named in his honor, was later built on Romig Hill.
[edit] References
- Biography at the Cook Inlet Historical Society
- "Honored Alaskans" at Anchorage Memorial Park Cemetery
- Joseph H. Romig Genealogy at RootsWeb
- Correspondence (1910-11) at the Alaska State Library
[edit] Bibliography
- Anderson, Eva Greenslit Dog-Team Doctor: The Story of Dr. Romig, 1940
- Romig, Ella Mae Ervin When the Geese Come: The Journals of a Moravian Missionary, 1997 (ISBN 0-912006-89-7)
Preceded by Herbert E. Brown |
Mayor of Anchorage 1937–1938 |
Succeeded by Herbert E. Brown |