Tom Steinberg
Marriages
Florence Steinberg
Obituaries
Vail Daily page A6 - October 14, 2017
Commentary: Tom Steinberg will be sorely missed by many
I moved to Vail in 1983 when Vail still had the feel of a frontier community. The arts were certainly frontier. (As Tom put it, we planted the very first seeds for the arts in Vail.) I was the newly hired director of the Vail Institute for the Performing Arts. Dr. Tom Steinberg was the chairman of the board.
At first, I thought ours would be a strictly professional relationship. Tom was so reserved and business-like, I did not imagine the deep humanness that lurked beneath his quiet demeanor. I certainly did not imagine that Tom and Flo Steinberg would become my family for the years I spent in Vail, that they would become cherished, lifelong friends.
A few years ago during one of my Vail visits, I was sitting with Tom on a bench in town and talking, as we always did, about the things that mattered most in our lives. After a while, the Denver man who was sharing the bench with us spoke up and said, "Forgive my eavesdropping, but I'm so enamored of your relationship I just had to tell you how much I hope someday my daughter and I will sit and talk like the two of you. You are father and daughter, right?"
I said, "Actually, we worked together years ago and have been close friends ever since." We told him about the Vail Institute and its role in promoting the arts in Vail more than 30 years earlier. And then I said, "But you are perceptive. Tom has been a surrogate father to me, as he has been to many in Vail since Vail's earliest years."
There are many of us who came to know Tom through the many organizations he served — many of us for whom he also became a faithful confidant and friend — and we will all be left with a big hole in our lives that will be impossible to fill. Vail has lost one of its longest and sturdiest roots in Tom Steinberg. And the world has lost one of its rarest creatures — an old-school gentleman, a man of integrity, a quiet, gentle soul.
Tom Steinberg was not just a doctor by profession. He was constitutionally driven to help, to heal, to solve problems and to find solutions, to be there for others wherever there was need, wherever he might make a difference. He devoted himself to every responsibility, whether in support of his family, an individual's health, the town of Vail, the Earth, the arts, responsible government, even the community's sense of itself as a true community, not because it would earn him the recognition he now so deserves, but because he was fundamentally driven to contribute, to give, to make the world a bit better in any way he could.
For those of us who were privileged to know him, he made the world better just by being in it, just by being living proof that people of character really do exist. Vail has lost one of its greatest treasures in Tom Steinberg. The world has lost an irreplaceable soul.
Christine Mary McGinley was the executive director of the Vail Institute for the Performing Arts from 1983 to 1987.
Vail Daily page A2 - September 26, 2017
After battling illness for a few days, Vail’s first full-time physician died Monday, Sept. 25 in the building that bears his legacy.
Dr. Tom Steinberg, a World War II veteran who participated in the liberation of the Dachau concentration camp before helping Vail’s early development as its first full-time doctor, died of complications from pneumonia at approximately 2:45 a.m. He was 93.
“He was at Vail Health when he died, so the building he was responsible for, he died in,” said his son, Erik Steinberg. “When he died, I said, ‘You know your way out the building, Dad.'”
Tom Steinberg was born March 15, 1924, in Mason City, Iowa. Growing up on a farm without much money, circumstances would not have likely allowed Steinberg to see much of the world. In 1943, however, that all changed for the 19-year-old.
“He wasn’t even shaving yet,” Erik Steinberg said. “But the war got him off the farm and into the world, and when he came back the GI Bill gave him a way to go to medical school.”
Upon returning home from the war, Steinberg received a Bronze Star for bravery. In 1965, he arrived in Vail with his wife, Florence, as well as their children Erik and Kristina Steinberg. He was following up on an ad that detailed the need for a physician in the new ski town.
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Operating out of the basement of the Red Lion building, Ski Patrol would bring patients to see Dr. Steinberg, and if he was occupied, they would wait outside in the snow because the building had no waiting area. It wasn’t much, but Steinberg made it work.
“Tom made house calls; he did everything,” recalled Nancy Kindel in the book “The Women of Vail.”
By 1971, Steinberg had moved into a medical building on Meadow Drive that is still used by Vail Health. Dr. Bill Holm and Dr. Jack Eck had joined him, as well as several nurses, pharmacists, a receptionist and a dentist.
“We all worked together, there were probably about 10 or 12 people there total,” recalled Eck. “There was a lot of camaraderie with the folks in that clinic.”
Steinberg went on to serve multiple terms on the Vail Town Council and helped develop Vail’s system of hiking trails. He was first elected to the council in 1968, and his 19 total years made him the longest-serving council member in Vail’s history. He was instrumental in the acquisition of land to be used for parks and open space, such as the Antholz property, which is now Ford Park, and he helped create a dedicated environmental planner position in the Vail Community Development Department in 1992.
In 2016 he was recognized with the town’s first Trailblazer Award for his civic contributions to Vail. The Trailblazer Award was suggested by longtime local Vi Brown as a way to honor Vail’s pioneers; Brown said for the first installment of the award she could think of no one more deserving than Steinberg.
Even into his 90s Steinberg continued to work on behalf of environmental conservation initiatives, serving as President Emeritus of the Eagle Valley Land Trust and Eagle River Watershed Council.
In 2011, he was honored at the Evergreen Ball for his legacy of environmental stewardship.
"It is the tradition of The Evergreen Ball to honor an individual who has had an impact on environmental conservation, and we can think of no other person who has consistently made amazing contributions to land, water and life in our beautiful valley for nearly 50 years," Kara Heide, former executive director of the Eagle Valley Land Trust, said at the time. "We are extremely proud to honor Tom Steinberg at The Evergreen Ball this year for his passion, his commitment and his tireless work on behalf of our natural environment, our open spaces and our waterways here in Eagle County."
Throughout his life, Steinberg felt it was important to speak without reservation about the atrocities he witnessed in the war. He continued to do so into his 90s.
“He was really glad that he stood up for truth,” Erik Steinberg said. “He gave lectures at many schools about his personal eyewitness accounts from the concentration camps in World War II, and his recollections will leave a huge legacy.”
In 2015, the Vail Daily sat down with Steinberg to discuss his World War II experience.
Steinberg’s wife, Florence, was also a force for good in the community. She helped start the Eagle County Historical Society and served on the town sign committee.
A native of Askam, Pa., “Flo” was a coal miner's daughter and the youngest of 12 children. She earned a nursing degree and met her future husband in an operating room in New York. The Steinbergs were married in 1952 and lived in Missouri and New Jersey before moving to Vail.
She was an actress in Vail drama troupes and enjoyed summer concerts such as the Bravo! Vail Valley Music Festival. Flo died in 2007 at age 83.
"She cared a whole lot about the community and the political situation and whether people were doing the right thing," her husband said after her death.
We will continue to update this story.