Society Founders, Dr. Muller and Dr.Jones
Dr. William H. Muller, Jr. – Bio
William H. Muller, Jr., M.D. was the S. Hurt Watts Professor and Chairman of the Department of Surgery at the University of Virginia (1954-1982). He was the former Vice President for Health Affairs at the University of Virginia (1976-1987), and was most recently a Special Assistant to the President of the University (1987-1990). Dr. Muller was Emeritus Professor of Surgery at the University of Virginia until his death in 2012.
Dr. Muller is a native of Dillon, South Carolina. He graduated from the McCallie School in Chattanooga, Tennessee, and received his B.S. degree from The Citadel in 1940 and his M.D. degree from Duke University in 1943. He completed his graduate education in surgery at the Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore under Dr. Alfred Blalock. He was married to Hildwin Clare Headley of Baltimore, a graduate of the University of Maryland and a nurse at Johns Hopkins Hospital, in 1946. The Mullers have three children, Marietta Clare, William Henry, III, and John Lewis, and nine grandchildren. Dr. Muller served in the U.S. Army in 1946 and 1947. He returned to Johns Hopkins in 1948 and completed his general and cardiovascular surgical residencies there. He was invited by Dr. William Longmire, the new Chief of Surgery at UCLA with whom he had served on the housestaff at Johns Hopkins, to Los Angeles to help build a new medical school. He served for a period of time as Chief of General Surgery and developed a cardiothoracic surgical program in the Harbor General Hospital and the St. John’s Hospital because the UCLA Hospital had not yet been completed. There he developed the pulmonary artery banding procedure and applied it clinically. He was appointed Professor and Chairman of the Department of Surgery at the University of Virginia in 1954 and over the ensuing several years developed one of the first complete aortic valve prostheses.
Dr. Muller was one of the founders of the Association for Academic Surgery, and has served as President for the Society of University Surgeons, the Society for Vascular Surgery, the Southern Surgical Association, and the American Surgical Association. He also served as Vice Chairman of the American Board of Surgery. He became a member of the Board of Regents of the American College of Surgeons in 1971, was made Chairman of the Board in 1976, and was President-elect in 1978. He served as President of the College in 1979-1980. Dr. Muller served as an active member of the Executive Committee from 1974 until 1987. He is currently an Emeritus Member. He received one of the first Distinguished Medical Alumni Awards in 1969. He also received honorary degrees of Doctor of Science from the Citadel in 1972, and Doctor of Humane Letters from the Medical University of South Carolina in 1977. He was made a member of the Society of Scholars of Johns Hopkins in 1979, and was selected for the Thomas Jefferson Award by the University of Virginia in 1982.
In the year following Dr. Muller’s arrival in Charlottesville, two chief residents in general surgery completed their residencies. During the ensuing years this number expanded to four in general surgery and one in thoracic and cardiovascular surgery.
Dr. Muller retired from the Faculty of the University of Virginia in 1990. Dr. Muller and Hillie moved to Irvington, Virginia in 2008.
Sadly, Dr. Muller passed away on April 19, 2012 after a serious illness. His example of visionary leadership, sound academic judgment, and commitment to family and friends will be missed by all of us in the Society, and throughout the surgical world.
Dr. R. Scott Jones – Bio
Rayford Scott Jones, MD
Rayford Scott Jones, M.D. is the former S. Hurt Watts Professor and Chairman of the Department of Surgery at the University of Virginia Health System (1981-2001). Dr. Jones was also active in the American College of Surgeons, serving as Director of the Division of Research and Optimal Patient Care. He is currently Emeritus Professor of Surgery at the University of Virginia.
Dr. Jones is a native of Tyler, Texas. He married Carol Elaine Benson in 1958, who sadly, passed away in 2009. Together they had three children, Scott, Lynn, and Holly and four grandchildren. Dr. Jones received his B.A. degree from the University of Texas in 1958 and his M.D. degree from the University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, Texas in 1961. He completed his graduate education in surgery at the University Of Pennsylvania School Of Medicine under the direction of Jonathan Rhoads, M.D. He then spent time as a Fellow in Gastroenterology at the University of California, Los Angeles under the guidance of M. I. Grossman.
Dr. Jones began his academic career as an Assistant Professor of Surgery at the University of California, San Francisco. He was then recruited by Dr. David Sabiston, Chief of Surgery at Duke University, to join the faculty as an Associate Professor of Surgery. He quickly built a highly successful, nationally recognized practice in Gastrointestinal Surgery. His leadership skills and academic accomplishments were recognized early in his career resulting in an invitation to become Chairman of Surgery at the University of Virginia. He accepted and was appointed Professor and Chairman in 1981. During his twenty-year tenure as Chairman, he took an outstanding department and solidified its reputation as a nationally recognized academic surgery program.
Dr. Jones has been involved in every level of surgical leadership and its organizations. He was a Governor of the American College of Surgeons and Chairman of the Advisory Council of Surgery. He completed his term as the President of the American College of Surgeons from 2001-2002. Dr. Jones also is past President of the Society for Surgery of the Alimentary Tract and the Southern Surgical Association. He served on the Residency Review Committee for Surgery and on the American Board of Surgery. In addition to serving as Chairman of the Department of Surgery, he was President of the Health Services Foundation. Dr. Jones was honored with the Distinguished Alumnus Award from the University of Texas Medical Branch in 1986 and Duke University Medical Center in 1987, in recognition for his outstanding contributions.
Dr. Jones retired from the Faculty of the University of Virginia in February 2006, but he rejoined the Faculty as an Emeritus Professor and is actively pursuing outcomes research as well as working part-time with the NSQIP team.
Dr. Jones lives on his Crossroads Farm in North Gardens.