San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

John A. Sarconi, MD

-

October 6, 1931-July 27, 2021

Resident of San Mateo, CA

John Sarconi led a long, rewarding, and abundant life, enjoying two happy marriages, six loving children and 4 beloved grandchild­ren, wonderful friends, and a stimulatin­g and immensely satisfying career. He died on July 27, 2021, 71 days shy of his 90th birthday and 3 weeks short of his 1st wedding anniversar­y to his second wife, Marjorie Robinson.

John was born in Denver, CO, to Marion Cullen Sarconi and Anthony Joseph Sarconi, and was raised there with his younger siblings, Carole and Pat (Tony), surrounded by a large extended family of aunts, uncles, and cousins. His mother was a nurse and her great admiration for the doctors she worked with sparked an early interest in the medical career that would define his life.

At the age of 18, a year after graduating from North High School and as he was starting his sophomore year at the University of Colorado, Boulder, he married his high-school sweetheart, Luanne Chambliss (after altering his driver’s license to appear to have reached the age of consent). He became a father at 20, while still an undergradu­ate. The following years were lean and challengin­g, as he worked his way through college and medical school, taking jobs as a dishwasher, fry cook, furniture salesman, and door-to-door Fuller Brush salesman, among others.

After completing medical school and an internship in Michigan, John went into active duty with the air force to repay the scholarshi­p he’d received. Over the next 6 years he moved his growing family to Alabama, Texas, and the Florida panhandle, driving the family station wagon full of carsick children and at least one howling cat and towing a trailer with all their worldly possession­s behind them. Luanne had always dreamed of living in California, so, in 1963 they packed up and drove cross-country yet again, now with 5 children and #6 on the way. After 4 years in southern California, they realized their mistake and moved to the promised land, San Mateo, 20 miles south of San Francisco. It was 1967, the Summer of Love, and one of the first things they did was to visit the Haight Ashbury. They never looked back.

John joined the highlyresp­ected medical practice of Drs. Harold “Hal” Hopper and Edward “Bud” Persike in San Mateo and spent the next 29 years serving the community while doing what he loved. He chose internal medicine because of the intellectu­al rigor it required. His children will tell you that every night after dinner he retired to his study to read his medical journals. They remember the phone ringing in the middle of the night and the front door opening and closing 10 minutes later. His patients loved him because they knew they were getting his best, and his best was the best there was. As the medical practice thrived and grew, they were fortunate enough to be joined by Drs. Beatty “Chip” Ramsay and Dale Ritzo. He held his colleagues in the highest esteem both personally and profession­ally. The office was also blessed to have an exceptiona­l and dedicated staff, many of whom became life-long personal friends. John thoroughly enjoyed this time of his life and loved being a part of such a wonderful community. Many virtuous words can be used to describe John: hard-working, responsibl­e, dedicated, and compassion­ate, among others. He had a strong sense of propriety, of right and wrong, and was a man of impeccable integrity. He was also a man of many interests. He played the piano and tennis, enjoyed fishing, loved Mendocino and Carmel, visited the de Young Museum and Palace of the Legion of Honor often, was knowledgea­ble about and savored fine wines and enjoyed a good margarita. He loved to travel, was an accomplish­ed photograph­er, and read widely, especially history. Although the demands of his career, especially in the early days, meant long hours at the hospital, John did his

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