Print
Health Care

Health Care Heroes Lifetime Achievement: Bertram Williams

By Neil Cotiaux, posted Nov 10, 2014
Bertram Williams is one of the finalists for the 2014 Health Care Heroes Lifetime Achievement award. To read about the other finalists, click here and here.

From treating wounded soldiers to sharing his personal harvest, R. Bertram Williams Jr., 94, just keeps on giving.

Born on the Fourth of July – one of four family members to hold that distinction – Williams has remained a venerated figure in Wilmington’s medical community for decades. He helped lead the drive for a modern regional hospital, built a respected specialty practice and worked to assure quality care for patients, regardless of income.

The son of a downtown merchant, Williams earned his medical degree at Vanderbilt University before being assigned to the Second Marine Division during World War II. He applied his medical skills at Saipan and Okinawa and aided shipmates after a Japanese kamikaze attack.
After a stint in Korea, Williams returned to the Port City in 1951 to open a surgical practice at 308 N. Third St.

“I had a very difficult time getting started,” he remembers, eventually rising at 5 and going home at 9 as his practice grew. “I didn’t call it a job, I called it a way of life.” 

With his surgical partners, Horace Moore Jr. and Ellis Tinsley Sr., the practice absorbed costs for uninsured patients.

“I’d come home at night and have all sorts of vegetables and fresh oysters and things on my back door, and so did Dr. Williams,” said Tinsley, who also remembers how the three traveled to Burgaw at night on unpaved roads to perform surgery.

When funding for a new medical center to replace the aging James Walker Memorial Hospital stalled, Williams stepped into the limelight.

With a bond issue passed – “It just barely squeaked by,” he recalls – Williams surveyed the site on horseback and deemed it “the perfect spot for the hospital,” said a friend, retired pediatrician Frank Reynolds. Williams’ saddle remains on display at New Hanover Regional Medical Center as a personal tribute.

With the opening of New Hanover Regional Medical Center in 1967, Williams, Moore and Tinsley moved their practice, Wilmington Surgical Associates, to Medical Center Drive.

Williams also served at various times as the hospital’s chief of staff, as a trustee and board chairman, helping to define standards of care.

He also played a leading role in creating the charitable foundation that helps provide ongoing financial support for the facility, which receives no local tax dollars. And he’s made time for other causes close to his heart.

When he leased space in a property he owned to one of Domestic Violence Shelter and Services Inc.’s legacy agencies, the rent did not make it far.

“Whatever they paid me, I would donate back to them,” he said.

Retired since 1991, Williams keeps busy by planting corn and soybeans and tending to fruit trees.

“Several hundred people come and go each year and get everything they want,” son Bert said of his father’s largesse. “He does get great enjoyment out of sharing everything that he grows.”
Respected and praised as he nears 100, Bertram Williams Jr. continues to reap what he sows.
Ico insights

INSIGHTS

SPONSORS' CONTENT
Cfss headshots parker robert webversion 21422121214

The Latest Solar Scams and What You Can Do to Help Stop Them

Robert Parker - Cape Fear Solar Systems
Untitleddesign2 9202334730

Investing in the Health of Our Communities, for Today and the Future

Novant Health - New Hanover Regional Medical Center Novant Health
Jane

It’s Child’s Play

Jane Morrow - Smart Start of New Hanover County

Trending News

Intracoastal Angler To Grow With Two New Hampstead Stores

Emma Dill - Apr 30, 2024

Coyne Returns To Law Firm's Wilmington Office

Staff Reports - Apr 30, 2024

Wilmington-based Fishing App Wins NC IDEA Grant

Audrey Elsberry - Apr 30, 2024

Apartment Plans Move Ahead On Wooster Street

Emma Dill - Apr 29, 2024

Design-build Firm Welcomes Falvey As Director

Staff Reports - Apr 30, 2024

In The Current Issue

Bootstrapping A Remote Option

Michelle Penczak, who lives in Pender County, built her own solution with Squared Away, her company that now employs over 400 virtual assist...


Info Junkie: Lydia Thomas

Lydia Thomas, program manager for the Center for Innovation and Entrepreneurship at UNCW, shares her top info and tech picks....


With Coffee And Cocktails, Owners Mix It Up

Baristas are incorporating craft cocktail techniques into show-stopping coffee drinks, and bartenders are mixing espresso and coffee liqueur...

Book On Business

The 2024 WilmingtonBiz: Book on Business is an annual publication showcasing the Wilmington region as a center of business.

Order Your Copy Today!


Galleries

Videos

2024 Power Breakfast: The Next Season