Lelia Alice Dromgold was born near Saville Township, Pennsylvania, January 21, 1872. She was the daughter of Walker A. and Martha Ellen (Shull) Dromgold. When she was nine years of age, her mother died. She had attended the public schools here, but two years after her mother's death, with a brother, she went to York, Pennsylvania, where her father, of the firm of Hench & Dromgold, was engaged in the manufacturing business.[1]
There she continued her studies in the public schools, in the Collegiate Institute of York,[1] and the Peabody Conservatory of Music.[2]
In 1890, she accompanied members of the Young W.C.T.U. on a Flower Mission visit to the county jail and became interested in temperance reform.[3]
Career
On January 17, 1894, she married Clayton Ely Emig (1862–1940),[4] an attorney-at-law, of Washington, D.C., and thereafter resided in the National Capital, their home at Dupont Circle being the center of a large and influential circle of friends.[1]
Here she immediately became associated with the District W.C.T.U. and served as a local president, general secretary of work, and state corresponding secretary. She wrote several temperance leaflets.[3]
Emig was known as an organizer and was the founder and organizing regen[2]t of a large D.A.R. chapter named in honor of her ancestor, Abigail Hartman Rice, a nurse of Revolutionary days.[1] Emig traced her ancestry to the following patriots of the Revolutionary War: John Hench, Jacob Hartman, Zachariah A. Rice, Nicholas Ickes, John Hartman, Frederick Shull, Thomas Donally, and Abigail Hartman Rice, of Pennsylvania.[3]
It was through the interest created by the Hench and Dromgold Reunions held in Perry County that Emig became enthusiastic about genealogical work. In 1915, she compiled and published her work on the Hench, Dromgold, and allied families.[1]
Personal life
She had three daughters, Evelyn (1895–1982), Gladys (1897–1993), and Lelia (1900–1952),[4] who were followers of their mother's philanthropic work.[3]
During World War I, her daughters all served in the government. Gladys and Lelia were among the first women to enroll as Yoemen, First Class, in the U.S. Navy, and Evelyn was in the office of the Adjutant General. Her husband, Capt. Emig, served for seventeen months in the Aviation Department of the Signal Corps.[1]