In Iowa City Emma rented a room from Theresa Stach, the mother of friend Mary (May) Stach. Using an inheritance that Stach had received, Emma and Mary opened a ladies' clothing store in 1913, Harvat and Stach, which became a success. Stach was the store's expert on fashion, and Harvat ran the business. By 1919 Harvat and Stach built a new house, the
Emma J. Harvat and Mary E. Stach House, now listed on the
National Register of Historic Places. Harvat was elected to the Iowa City city council in 1921, serving two terms as alderman-at-large. In 1922 the then-mayor, Ingalls Swisher, resigned and Emma Harvat was elected mayor pro tem by the council. She ran for mayor in 1923 and was elected, the first female mayor of Iowa City. As the first female leader of a city with a population of more than 10,000 in the United States, her election was covered in national and international newspapers. She served as mayor until 1925 through a period of civic growth. During her tenure a zoning commission was established, and city services were improved and extended. Harvat lost election to a third term, and made an unsuccessful run for the council in 1935. In 2000 the City Council auditorium at the City Hall of Iowa City, was designated Emma J. Harvat Hall. She was inducted into the
Iowa Women's Hall of Fame in 2007. ==See also==