All Trailblazers
D
Science & Technology

Dr. Daniel Hale Williams

Born 1856 · Joined the Ancestors 1931
Fact
Performed the first successful open-heart surgery in 1893
Fact
Founded the first non-segregated hospital in America
Fact
First Black member of the American College of Surgeons

Dr. Daniel Hale Williams performed the first successful open-heart surgery in 1893 — without the benefit of antibiotics, blood transfusions, or modern anesthesia. The patient, James Cornish, had been stabbed in the chest and was dying. Williams opened his chest, repaired the pericardium, and Cornish lived for another twenty years.

Williams also founded Provident Hospital in Chicago in 1891 — the first non-segregated hospital in the United States and one of the first to have an interracial staff. It became a training ground for Black nurses and doctors shut out of white institutions.

Born in Pennsylvania to a mixed-race family, Williams apprenticed under a surgeon before attending Chicago Medical College. His dual legacy — medical pioneer and institution builder — changed both the practice and accessibility of medicine in America.

A surgeon must have a strong stomach, a steady hand, and above all, the courage to act.
— Dr. Daniel Hale Williams
Share
Community Contribution

Suggest an Edit

Help us keep Dr. Daniel Hale Williams's profile accurate and complete.

Helps our team verify the information.

Key Milestones

A Life in Firsts

1856
Born in Hollidaysburg, Pennsylvania
1883
Graduates from Chicago Medical College
1891
Founds Provident Hospital — first non-segregated hospital in the U.S.
1893
Performs first successful open-heart surgery
1894
Appointed chief surgeon at Freedmen's Hospital in Washington, D.C.
1913
Becomes first Black member of the American College of Surgeons

Join the Village

Get the Best of BOTWC Weekly

Our curated digest of the most powerful stories, newest firsts, and community highlights — delivered every Thursday.

Join 50,000+ subscribers. Unsubscribe anytime.