Volume 68, Issue 2 Louisville Medicine | Page 10

IN REMEMBRANCE IN REMEMBRANCE: CHARLES C. SMITH, MD SEPT. 27, 1930 - MARCH 8, 2020 Dr. Charles C. Smith, Jr. passed away on March 8, 2020. Dr. Smith was a brilliant internist, wonderful friend, father, husband and Christian. Dad was born in Fonde, Kentucky on Sept. 27, 1930 to Charles C. Smith, Sr. and Clytie Smith. Fonde was a coal camp during the time of the depression. Charles C. Smith, Sr. ran the coal company store and Clytie Smith was a school teacher. The people of this rural Bell County community depended upon each other for survival and success. It was here that Dad stated he learned that “folks are folks.” His mother emphasized education. Both Dad and his brother, Dr. James Smith of Dallas, had read every volume of the World Book Encyclopedia growing up. Dad always considered Eastern Kentucky “God’s Country.” Dr. Smith attended Georgetown College as an undergraduate and graduated Summa Cum Laude. He attended the University of Louisville School of Medicine–his father had recommended that he become a doctor, so he could always be his own boss. While at UofL, he met my mother, Rosemary Sledge Smith, the daughter of a Methodist minister. They married in 1956, and she was always the love of his life until she passed away in 2013. He completed a rotating internship at University Hospital and Hillman Clinic in Birmingham, Alabama with the goal to learn medicine from Dr. Tinsley Harrison. He then served in the US Air Force as a Flight Surgeon for the Military Air Transport Service. While in San Antonio, his primary duty was to fly around the world and serve as an attending for servicemen suffering with polio–from this, he developed a tremendous knowledge of the iron lung. He brought this expertise back home as a medical resident at UofL and served as Chief Resident from 1960-1961. He joined the fulltime faculty initially at UofL always with the Gratis Faculty, rising to Clinical Professor of Medicine in 1985. As a practicing internist, Dr. Smith was known as a consummate diagnostician and clear decision-maker. He once told me that during the course of his 50 years in medicine he felt like there was not a condition he had not seen. Throughout his career and into his retirement, he read every issue ever published of The New England Journal of Medicine and Lancet. Dad was a wonderful father, taking his family on vacations every year and attending all of our sports and academic events. He had four children–Dr. Charles C. Smith, III is a pulmonologist in New Orleans; Dr. Mark Smith is an orthopaedic surgeon with Ellis & Badenhausen in Louisville; Dr. Stephanie Altobellis is an internist who served as partner to Dr. Smith; and the youngest, Cynthia Smith is a CPA and Director with HCA Healthcare. During Dr. Smith’s career, he was interested in the politics of medicine and had the opportunity to serve as President of the Jefferson County Medical Society, the Kentucky Medical Association, Governor of the American College of Physicians and Counselor from Kentucky to the Southern Medical Association. He was also a member of the initial Board of Directors of Anthem Health Insurance. He also served as President of the Innominate Society for the Study of Medical History and Louisville Society of Internists. He received many accolades during the course of his practice. He received the outstanding alumnus award from Georgetown College in 1973, the Alumni Service Award from the University of Louisville in 1987, Physician Laureate Award (Kentucky Chapter) from the American College of Physicians in 1991, Distinguished Alumnus Award from University of Louisville School of Medicine in 1993, Excellence in 8 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE