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Key Peninsula’s medical history
By Colleen Slater
KP News
In the early days of the Key
Peninsula, doctors and hospitals were some distance
away, and only reachable by boat.
The Native Americans who camped and
later lived in the area offered various plants for
medications, and the early settlers brought their own
homemade remedies with them. Families doctored
themselves, or neighbors helped neighbors, and certain
women in the communities became midwives.

John Alexander Hall, first practicing doctor in
Vaughn,
1889-1895. Photo courtesy KP Historical
Society Museum |
Marge Radonich says her dad and
brothers formed their own logging company in part
because of how injuries in the woods were treated. An
injured man was propped up by a stump until the workday
was over, then transported back to camp on a wagon. Some
didn’t survive.
Many local “old-timers” have
stories of traveling to doctors and hospitals or
bringing in medical help on the early boats.
Two early doctors on the peninsula
both arrived in Vaughn. Dr. Joseph Coblentz, a physician
in Illinois in 1888, was nearly 69 when he came to
Vaughn with his son and family from Kansas. He never
practiced in the community, as far as local historians
can determine.
John Alexander Hall, from Missouri
by way of Texas and California, in late 1889. His dream
was to farm. At age 52, he did some minor practicing in
Vaughn, but his wife thought the community too small for
major practice; people knew each other too well.
Great-granddaughter Dulcie Schillinger says, “Cornelia
would not allow him to deliver babies.” Local midwife
“Grandma” Wright continued with that service.
Hall maintained good physical
health, chopped wood every morning, after a quick swim
in the bay, regardless of weather or time of year.
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Call with information
Anyone with additional information
on early medical history on the Key
Peninsula is encouraged to contact
Colleen Slater at the Key Peninsula
News office at 884-4699 or email
cas4936@centurytel.net. |
He was killed by a falling tree
while in the process of clearing his land in 1895. J. A.
Hall Road in Vaughn was named for him.
Dr. J. J. Leisir had an office near
the dock in Home, with a pharmacy in back, from 1919 to
1928. He delivered Evelyn Dadisman Evans, among other
local babies. He backed his Model T off the bay road
below his house once, and needed rescuing. Evans says he
was an elderly man. He died in 1928.
Dr. G. A. T. De l’Espinnase worked
with Dr. Leisir in Home for awhile. His assessed
property value in the 1915 Pierce County directory was
$120.
“Doc” Lawrence’s office was near
the Cooper Hotel in Lakebay, about 1930. He apparently
operated “outside the realm,” according to local
scuttlebutt, with a questionable reputation or
credentials. However, many local residents were his
patients. He may have been the doctor who was known to
never bill patients, accepting groceries, and even a
suit of clothes as payment.
Dr. Arthur Seeley Monzingo operated
a small hospital in Gig Harbor from 1925 to 1943.
Marguerite Bussard said he came to her Longbranch home
to deliver her.
Dr. Merrill E. Thomas, an
osteopath, lived in Glencove, but had an office in Home
in the early 1930s. He treated animals and once removed
the scent glands from a skunk, which he delighted in
releasing at the Sportsmen’s Club. Thomas was active in
several local organizations, and helped establish the
Sportsmen’s Club, Evergreen School, and Penrose Park.
Dale Ramsdell was one of his deliveries. Thomas Road in
Glencove was named for him. Key Pen’s Dr. William Roes
has a bookcase, some medical equipment and artifacts
that belonged to Thomas, who died in 1962 in an Allyn
nursing home.
Dwayne Johnson’s office was in a
large white building next to the Lakebay marina. Some
old-timers called it a clinic, and several local
residents were born there, including Nick Boquist.
Johnson practiced from 1930 to 1935. He doctored Chet
Dadisman, quarantined with scarlet fever for six weeks,
and also made home visits to Dadisman’s grandfather
Lehman in his last years. Lottie Dadisman had a
fingertip amputated by Johnson, and it grew back, says
daughter Evelyn Evans.
Johnson’s son, playmate of Henry
Ramsdell, received a red wagon for Christmas, and the
boys enjoyed using it. Ramsdell tells about falling on
an axe when he was 5 or 6, and Dr. Johnson stitched it
up. While Ramsdell was “out” with the ether, the doctor
also performed an additional delayed surgery.
Other doctors lived or visited the
peninsula in later years, including David Glenn of Rocky
Bay, R. G. Gilbert of Burley, and Kyle Chapman, who saw
a few local patients at his home after retiring on the
Key Pen.
In 1972, Jeanne Broadsack, public
health nurse practitioner, brought supplies from Tacoma
for a clinic in a building on the grounds of Longbranch
Church. Judy Wilson and Nat Knox, retired Navy nurses,
helped. Donated clothes grew into the Angel Guild, which
donated money to the health clinic.
In 1981, Roes put in half-day each
week at the clinic, under a three-year obligation with
the National Health Service Corps. He became full time
in 1984, and the rest of the story is doctors, nurse
practitioners, and an up-to-date facility on the Key
Peninsula.
This article is based on local
interviews, museum histories, and research by Dr.
William Roes.
©Copyright 2005-2008, Key Peninsula
News, all rights reserved.
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