DR. PHILIP A. LOOMIS
- Dr. Philip A. Loomis, pioneer western heart specialist and
Colorado's most noted iris hybridizer, died March 9 th at age
94.
....Dr. Loomis was born Sept. 21,
1875, in Chicago, where he grew up and attended Rush Medical
College from which he graduated in 1904. While in medical school
Dr. Loomis contracted tuberculosis. With no effective drugs available
at that time physicians often recommended that TB patients seek
the dry climate of Colorado with maximum exposure to air and
sunshine. Accordingly, after his graduation from Rush, Dr. Loomis
bought a round trip ticket from Chicago to Colorado Springs (round
trip since he was not sure he would wish to stay) and arrived
in Colorado to regain his health. Buying a team, wagon and camp
equipment he roamed the hills of the mile-high state for several
months and found his rigorous regimen in the salubrious climate
effective; the TB conquered.
....With the return half of his
round trip ticket still in his pocket he decided to stay in Colorado
a while longer and started his medical practice in Colorado Springs.
Here he met and married Sara Jackson, daughter of Colorado pioneers.
As a heart specialist Dr. Loomis installed the first electro-cardiograph
machine west of the Mississippi river.
....After retiring from a very successful
practice Dr. Loomis was able to devote more attention to his
interest in the iris, a hobby he liked but one his friends enjoyed
even more, for a trek to the Loomis garden has always been the
highlight of the Colorado iris season. With a magnificent view
of Pikes Peak to the west, and tall evergreens protecting the
iris planted in both formal beds and scattered about in smaller
plantings, blooms were displayed to perfection. Phil and Sara
Loomis welcomed all with warmest hospitality.
....BLUE VELVET in 1929 was Dr.
Loomis' first introduction. ln 1931 the first pink bud iris bloomed
in the Loomis garden. Though light in color and small in stature
this variety, SEASHELL, was a major breakthrough in pink breeding.
Displayed at the Chicago 1933-34 World's Fair, the planting brought
forth expressions of disbelief from irisarians who maintamed
"Irises don't come in that color." With MOROCCO ROSE,
introduced in 1937, SEASHELL is in the background of most of
today's pink iris.
....Best known of Loomis irises
is ELMOHR. Introduced in 1942, at which time Kenneth Smith, writing
in the Bulletin, said "I consider this the outstanding iris
of the year. It is by far the best of the WILLIAM MOHR seedling,"
Elmohr quickly rose through the ranks and won the Dykes Medal
in 1945. For 25 years it won Popularity Poll rating. Probably
more plants of ELMOHR have been sold than any other variety.
....ELMOHR was not the fortuitous
result of a chance cross. Rather it was the result of an intensive
hybridization program over many years. ln a separate plot in
northeast Colorado Springs Dr. Loomis had over a thousand plants
of WILLIAM MOHR.
Over the years he made many thousands of crosses and bloomed
hundreds of Mohr seedlings. Few were introduced, for Dr. Loomis
was very reticent and felt his iris were never quite good enough
for introduction. (He did admit to me once in recent years that
just possibly ELMOHR had been worthy of
introduction.) Big, beautiful SPANISH
PEAKS, delicately traced CASTLE
ROCK, and Mohr hybrid SARAMOHR
belie this bashfulness. ASPENGLOW brought
Dr. Loomis the President's Cup in 1963. ln 1944 he was awarded
the Society's Hybridizer's Medal and in 1966 the Board of Directors
honored him with the Distinguished Service Medal.
....Dr. Loomis was preceded in death
by his wife, Sara, and is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Barbara
Loomis Woodward, and a son, Philip.
....After carrying the stub of his
return ticket in his wallet for 66 years, Phil Loomis has left
Colorado. We miss him, but we are richer for having known such
a wonderful man.
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