DARING
DOCTOR SOFIE
By Cynthia Sterling
When word went out that a new doctor was
coming to the frontier town of Brazosport,
Texas in 1893, many people were shocked to
learn the physician in question was a woman.
Further investigation would have revealed
that she was a widow with 14 grown children,
and that she was coming to Texas all the way
from New York. What kind of a woman was
this?
Any who awaited Dr. Sofie Herzog's
arrival expecting to see some grandmotherly
midwife must have been dumfounded at the
attractive, energetic and highly skilled
physician who confronted them. Only 45 years
old, Dr. Herzog was a graduate of a Viennese
university, where she had observed and
trained with some of the most prestigious
physicians of the day. She had managed a
successful medical practice in New York, but
she came to Texas for the same reason so
many early settlers were drawn to the 28th
state -- adventure!
Physicians were still a rarity in that
part of the country, and female or not, "Dr.
Sofie," as she came to be called, had little
trouble establishing her medical practice.
Many of her patients were the unlucky
participants in brawls and shootouts. She
quickly earned a reputation as a deft hand
at removing bullets. And this
European-trained lady doctor delighted in
the compliments, so much so that she had a
necklace made of the bullets she removed
from patients, with a gold bead threaded
between each slug. She accumulated a chain
of 24 and wore this unique piece of jewelry
often, claiming it brought her luck. Though
the really lucky ones were the patients
under Dr. Sofie's care.
Born in Austria in 1848, Sofie's father
was an internationally known surgeon. She
was only 14 when she married her husband,
also a surgeon, and in 26 years of marriage
they produced 14 children, including two
sets of twins. Caring for her large family
wasn't enough for Sofie. She began studying
medicine as a way to help her husband, and
continued to assist him when he moved his
practice to New York in 1886.
The Herzogs had been in the United States
only a few years when Sofie was widowed. She
continued to practice medicine in New York
until 1893, when she decided to follow her
youngest daughter, Elfriede Marie, to Texas.
Dr. Sofie lived with her daughter and
son-in-law when she first arrived in
Brazosport, and practiced out of their
house. But after a while she wanted her own
place. She had a three-room office built on
Market Street, with living quarters in the
back. Her son-in-law, Randolph Prell,
worried about her living alone, and offered
her a gun, but she refused the weapon.
Even without a gun, Sofie proved capable
of looking after herself. Once when a
visitor gave her trouble, and refused to
leave her office, she grabbed up a poker
from the fireplace and banished him.
"I want no odds because I'm a woman," Dr.
Sofie said, and indeed, it seems her sex was
never a barrier to doing what she wanted. In
1905, when construction began on the St.
Louis, Brownsville and Mexico Railroad,
Sofie applied for the post of Chief Surgeon
for the line.
She had already cared for many of the
workers, who were often injured on the job
or suffered from various illnesses. Her
former patients praised her abilities and
she had little trouble winning the job of
railroad doctor.
But apparently, the railroad officials
had no idea that their new company doctor
was a woman. Upon learning this startling
news, they promptly sent a letter asking Dr.
Herzog to resign. "I'll keep this job so
long as I give satisfaction," Sofie replied.
The matter ended there. Dr. Sofie proved her
abilities again and again, traveling by
horseback, boxcar, engine or handcar to
reach her patients along the railroad line.
She held the post of Chief Surgeon for the
railroad for 30 years.
Though she lived a rugged lifestyle,
competing in a masculine world, Dr. Sofie
never let it be forgotten that she was a
woman. She remained close to her 14 children
and loved to talk about her grandchildren.
She enjoyed needlework and kept a workbasket
in her office so that she could sew or
crochet in the time between patients.
In addition to her own office, Dr. Sofie
built two other buildings in town. She
joined her daughter and son-in-law in the
Episcopalian congregation, and financed the
construction of a new church. She also built
the Southern Hotel, a two and a half story
edifice that provided lodging for visitors
to the town and was the site of many local
balls and meetings.
Ever the trendsetter, Dr. Sofie was one
of the first in Brazosport to purchase an
automobile. She took driving lessons from
the salesman and soon began making her
rounds behind the wheel of a Ford runabout.
By the time she died in July of 1925, the
rough and tumble town of Brazosport had
grown out of most of its wilder ways. Dr.
Sofie had seen a lot of changes in her 32
years there, but she never forgot her early
adventures. At her request, she was buried
with her 'good luck' bullet necklace.
Cynthia Sterling writes historical
romance for Berkley and Kensington.
You can visit her website at http://members.aol.com/CySterling
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