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BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH
                                                             Of
                                               M⸫W⸫ Stephen J. Chadwick

                                                         1900-1901

                                               Most Worshipful Brother Stephen James Chadwick was born at
                                               Roseburg, Oregon, on April 28, 1863, to pioneer parents in the
                                               Oregon  country.  At  that  time,  his  illustrious  father,  Stephen
                                               Fowler Chadwick, was Deputy Grand Master of the Grand Lodge
                                               of Oregon, from which station he became Grand Master, served
                                               his Grand Lodge for many years as chairman of the Committee
                                               on Correspondence, and from 1889 until his death in 1895 was
                                               Grand  Secretary.  Most  Worshipful  Brother  Stephen  Fowler
                                               Chadwick also served as Governor of the State of Oregon from
                                               February 1, 1877 to September 11, 1878.

               Stephen James Chadwick was educated in the Oregon schools, and liked to refer in his later years
               in discussing any given subject to what was said in "McGuffey's Reader." He studied at Willamette
               University in Salem and at the Oregon State University at Eugene.

               He was admitted to the practice of law in 1885, and early in his professional career went with
               young Mark
               A. Fullerton to Colfax, Washington, where these two as partners opened their humble law office.
               Young Chadwick became layor of the town and also served as chairman of the State Board of Land
               Commissioners; while in 1898 his partner, Fullerton, was elected to the Supreme Bench of the
               state. In 1900 "Steve", as everyone at Colfax and in Whitman County by then referred to Bro.
               Chadwick, was elected to the superior court judgeship, which position he efficiently held until he
               was appointed on December 3, 1908, to a place on the Supreme Bench of the state by the side of
               his former partner.

               Stephen J. Chadwick came to our State Supreme Bench at a most opportune time. He was permitted
               through his selection to become associated with those outstanding thinkers, Justices O. R. Dunbar
               and Frank H. Rudkin. Almost at once he took a place at their sides as the third distinguished justice
               in our state's judicial history. His first reported decision is the case of Anderson v. Mitchell, 51
               Wash. 265, decided December 24, 1908; his last, a dissenting opinion as Chief Justice, is Miller v.
               Kemper, 107 Wash.
               274. During the span between these two cases, in the eleven years that he served can be found
               much of that substantive law declared by our Supreme Court which has stood the scrutiny and now
               bears the approval of other state jurisdictions and of federal courts.

               By his bench associations Justice Chadwick had knit into his very being the native practicality of
               Justice Dunbar, the stolid fortitude of Justice Rudkin and the geniality of his later associate. Justice
               Mack F. Gose, He was a leading influence and an impelling force with his fellow justices and he
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