The Oklahoman

Retired Air Force physician leaves $2.2M to OMRF

- By Lindsay Thomas Lindsay Thomas is Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation's director of public affairs.

Dr. Wesley Robert “Bob” Mote was soft- spoken and private. A U.S. Air Force physician for 39 years, Mote still lived in the 1,200-square-foot Moore home he purchased in the 1960s when he died at age 83.

Mote, who never married and had no children, made a $75 gift to the Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation in 1989. When he died, both foundation officials and Mote's family were more than a little surprised to learn of a second gift to OMRF worth $2.2 million.

“We were shocked to learn the size of his estate,” said Mote's great-nephew and namesake, Wes Mote, who said that his great-uncle lived a modest life. “Money meant very little to him. He cared nothing at all about impressing people.”

A second-generation physician, Mote's family traces his love of medicine to a childhood spent around his father's clinic in Ardmore. After graduating from medical school at the University of Oklahoma, the young man who had devoted hours of his childhood to writing letters to soldiers during World War II joined the Air Force.

After posts overseas and stateside, Mote took a staff position at Tinker Air Force Base. He devoted nearly four decades of his life to the care of servicemen and servicewom­en, and here tired as Tinker's chief of occupation­al medicine.

Beyond his medical career, Mote was an outdoorsma­n who enjoyed traveling the world, logging thousands of miles over his lifetime. “He would call us and say, ` I'm calling from China,' or `I'm headed to Costa Rica ,' or somewhere else,” said Wes Mote's wife, Leea. “He had just gotten back to Colorado after following the Lewis and Clark Trail and was about to head home when he died unexpected­ly.”

Although he was quiet-natured, his great-uncle radiated empathy and had “a manly way of being gracious and caring,” Wes Mote said. He especially delighted in mentoring young medical students, going out of his way to call and check in on them as their careers progressed. “He was so excited about what was to come i n medicine,” Wes Mote said.

An avid reader with an insatiable intellectu­al curiosity, Mote remained a student of medicine even after his retirement. Wes Mote said he attended seminars across the country and kept up with the latest advancemen­ts in science and medicine.

Because Mo te did not designate his donation to a particular area of s ci ence, the gift will fund research at OMRF where it is needed most. At OMRF, scientists work on projects affecting a wide range of illnesses, including cancer, Alzheimer's and heart disease.

“Dr. Mote's generosity will make a difference in the lives of countless Oklahomans and people everywhere ,” OM RF Senior Director of Developmen­t Sonny Wilkinson said. “It's clear that the hope for a brighter future medical research offers to us all mattered deeply to him.”

Wes Mote agrees. “He'd been around medicine since the time he was born, so to us, it makes perfect sense that he left his estate to research,” he said. “I think probably his only regret about dying was missing out on what's to come in medicine.”

 ?? MOTE] ?? Retired U.S. Air Force physician Dr. Bob Mote was soft-spoken and private. The Moore outdoorsma­n made a single gift to the Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation in 1989. When he died, he made a second gift to OMRF, worth $2 million. [PHOTO PROVIDED/WES AND LEEA
MOTE] Retired U.S. Air Force physician Dr. Bob Mote was soft-spoken and private. The Moore outdoorsma­n made a single gift to the Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation in 1989. When he died, he made a second gift to OMRF, worth $2 million. [PHOTO PROVIDED/WES AND LEEA

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