Mal Williams
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Maldwyn Leslie Williams (9 September 1886 – 3 March 1917), known as "Mal" as a VFL footballer, mostly known as "Les" – and sometimes as "Billy" (from "Williams") – was an
Australian rules football Australian football, also called Australian rules football or Aussie rules, or more simply football or footy, is a contact sport played between two teams of 18 players on an oval field, often a modified cricket ground. Points are scored by k ...
er who played with University in the Victorian Football League. A graduate (M.B.B.S.) of Melbourne University, Lieutenant-Colonel Williams, serving as a medical officer in the First AIF, died as a result of wounds received in action, in France.


Family

The son of
Edward David Williams Edward David Williams (24 September 1842 – 17 October 1909) was a former Australian politician. He was the Independent member for Castlemaine in the Victorian Legislative Assembly from 1894 to 1904. Career Williams was born in Wales ...
(1842–1909), M.L.A., and Jane Williams (1849–1919), née Jones, and brother of Susannah Jane Williams (1875–1942), he was born Castlemaine, Victoria on 9 September 1886. He married Margaret Grant on 26 March 1913. they had two children, Margaret Ruth Williams, born in May 1914, and Marie Helen Williams, born in November 1915.


Education

Educated at
Castlemaine Grammar School Castlemaine ( , non-locally also ) is a small city in Victoria, Australia, in the Goldfields region about 120 kilometres (75 miles) northwest by road from Melbourne and about 40 kilometres (25 miles) from the major provincial centre of Ben ...
and Melbourne Grammar School, Williams entered the University of Melbourne in March 1904, where he was a resident student at Trinity College for his entire undergraduate studies, having won a Trinity College scholarship.


Medicine

He graduated in medicine in 1908, and working as a surgeon at
Bendigo Base Hospital Bendigo Base Hospital is the major hospital of Bendigo, Victoria, Australia. It is operated by Bendigo Health Care Group (commonly known as Bendigo Health). The hospital is the largest regional hospital in Victoria and one of the largest public ho ...
, before going into private practice.


Football


University

While at University he played inter-collegiate football for Trinity College. In his last year at University (1908), both Melbourne University and the
Richmond Football Club The Richmond Football Club, nicknamed the Tigers, is an Australian rules football team playing in the Australian Football League (AFL). Between its inception in the Melbourne suburb of Richmond in 1885 and 1907, the club competed in the Victo ...
were admitted to the Victorian Football League (VFL). One of 32 players used by the university club in that inaugural season, he played seven senior matches for the university team – making his debut in the team that beat St Kilda 8.6 (54) to 5.10 (40) in round 4 (23 May 1908).


South Bendigo

He continued his football career during 1910 and 1911, when he was a "dashing half-back" with the South Bendigo football team; and, in 1913 and 1914, he served on the South Bendigo committee.


Military

In 1909 he joined the No. 2 Field Ambulance as captain. Once he had relocated to Bendigo (in 1910), he was posted to Kitchener Camp; and was later attached to the 67th (Bendigo) Infantry as a supernumerary medical officer. With the introduction of the universal military training scheme in Australia during 1911, he was given command of the B Section, 17th Australian Army Medical Corps. He was promoted to major in April 1914, and assumed command of the whole Corps in 1915. He enlisted in the First AIF, at Bendigo, in July 1915, and entered camp on 24 August that year. He saw service with the Field Ambulance in Egypt before being transferred to France. Williams was promoted to lieutenant-colonel in December 1916.


Death

He was wounded in action when in command of the 1st Field Ambulance, at Eaucourt L'Abbaye, when shot through the left shoulder and the lung on 2 March 1917 by an "indiscriminate sniper". He died of his wounds at the
3rd Australian Casualty Clearing Station Third or 3rd may refer to: Numbers * 3rd, the ordinal form of the cardinal number 3 * , a fraction of one third * 1⁄60 of a ''second'', or 1⁄3600 of a ''minute'' Places * 3rd Street (disambiguation) * Third Avenue (disambiguation) * Hig ...
, at Edgehill (near Dernancourt), on 3 March 1917. A few days later, the Australian Surgeon-General, Major-General Sir Neville Howse, VC, paid tribute to Williams by stating that, "everyone deplores the loss of a brilliant, popular young officer".


Mentioned in despatches

On 1 June 1917, the British War Office announced that Williams had been mentioned in dispatches. The posthumous recommendation, made by the G.O.C. 1st. Australian Division, dated 7 March 1917, read: ::Lieutenant-Colonel Maldwyn Leslie Williams: ::Seriously wounded in the forward area, when in charge of the Main Dressing Station at Bazentin and died of wounds on 3/3/17. ::This officer would have been recommended for the D.S.O. if he had lived. :: He was a very able administrator, and untiring and fearless in carrying out arrangements for evacuation of wounded.


Remembered


Trinity College

* Memorial plaque erected in Trinity College Chapel, Parkville (unveiled on 5 December 1917). ::This tablet is a tribute of affection and gratitude to the memory of Maldwyn Leslie Williams, M.B.B.S., Lieut-Colonel and commanding officer of the First Field Ambulance in the Australian Imperial Force. ::He died for the Empire on March 3rd 1917, from wounds sustained at Bapaume in France in the most faithful execution of his duty. ::At the University he won distinction in his medical course. ::He was a fine sportsman and played a worthy part in the Intercollegiate contests. He was deservedly loved by his fellow students for his simplicity, geniality, and graciousness, his gentleness and strength. He died as he had lived, sacrificing himself for others, and his spirit is with us still. ::This tablet has been erected by the officers, non-commissioned officers and men of his unit. ::"Death is swallowed up in victory."


Castlemaine

* Memorial plaque erected in the Congregational Church, Castlemaine (relocated to the Uniting Church, Castlemaine). ::To the Memory of Lieut. M.L. Williams 1st Fld. AMBE, A.I.F. ::(Late Major 8th Fld. AMBE) ::Erected by his fellow officers of the 8th Fld, Ambulance A.I.F who left Australia and served in Egypt and France with him to preserve the memory of one they loved and admired and respected, who was wounded, fearlessly doing his duty on the 26th Feb. 1917, during the advance on Bapaume, and died on the 3rd Mar. 1917 at Dernancourt, in the Village Cemetery of which place his body lies.


Bendigo

* Memorial plaque erected at the Bendigo Hospital by the Bendigo and Northern District branch of the British Medical Association.


Australian War Memorial

* His name is located at panel 184 in the Commemorative Area at the Australian War Memorial.


Commonwealth war grave

* He is buried at the Dernancourt Communal Cemetery Extension.Williams, Maldwyn Leslie, ''The Bendigo Roll of Honour''.
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See also

* List of Victorian Football League players who died on active service


Footnotes


Sources


Football: Melbourne v. University, ''The Argus'', (Saturday, 1 August 1908), p.19.
* Holmesby, Russell & Main, Jim (2007). The Encyclopedia of AFL Footballers. 7th ed. Melbourne: Bas Publishing. * Kiddle, John Beacham, ''War Services of Old Melburnians, 1914-1918'', Council of the Old Melburnian Society, (Melbourne), 1923. (at pp. 47, 63, and 121.) * Likeman, Robert, ''Australian Doctors on the Western Front: France and Belgium 1916-1918'', Rosenberg Publishing, (Dural Delivery Centre, NSW), 2014.
Millar, George Anthony ("Tony"), ''Maldwyn Leslie Williams (Known as "Leslie")'', Manuscript lodged with the Australian War Memorial, dated October 2013.
*
Obituary: Maldwyn Leslie Williams, ''The Medical Journal of Australia'', Vol.4, No.15, (14 April 1917), p.327.

Red Cross Society Wounded and Missing Enquiry Bureau Files, 1914-18 War: Lieutenant Colonel Maldwyn Leslie Williams: 1st Field Ambulance.

''The Fleur-de-Lys'', Trinity College, Melbourne University, Vol.1, No.1, June 1907.

''The Fleur-de-Lys'', Trinity College, Melbourne University, Vol.1, No.2, September 1907.

''The Fleur-de-Lys'', Trinity College, Melbourne University, Vol.1, No.3, May 1908.

''The Fleur-de-Lys'', Trinity College, Melbourne University, Vol.1, No.4, September 1908.

''The Fleur-de-Lys'', Trinity College, Melbourne University, Vol.1, No.6, September 1909.

''The Fleur-de-Lys'', Trinity College, Melbourne University, Vol.3, No.22, November 1922.The University Team, ''The Weekly Times'', (Saturday, 30 May 1908), p.25.

''University of Melbourne Medical School Jubilee 1914'', School of Medicine, University of Melbourne, (Carlton), 1915.

World War I Military Record: Lieutenant Colonel Maldwyn Leslie Williams, National Archives of Australia.


External links

* * {{DEFAULTSORT:Williams, Mal 1886 births 1917 deaths Australian rules footballers from Victoria (state) University Football Club players South Bendigo Football Club players People educated at Melbourne Grammar School People educated at Trinity College (University of Melbourne) Australian military doctors Australian military personnel killed in World War I