Wittenberg University Logo
Campus Directory | A-Z Index
Contact Information
Advancement Staff
Address Update
E-mail Alumni Office
Submit a Class Note

Alumni Association
Alumni Board Members
Alumni Chapters
Young Alumni

Alumni Giving
Make a Gift
The Wittenberg Fund
Planned Giving

News and Info:
Career Center
Homecoming
Around The Hollow
Wittenberg Magazine

Volunteer
Admission Volunteer

Alumni Awards
Nominate Someone
Athletics Hall of Honor
Legacy Scholarship
Recipients

Alumni Links
About Springfield
Wittenberg Bookstore
Board Of Directors
Desktop Wallpaper
Account Registration


 
pass it on

 

Evelyn Lundberg Stratton, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of OhioJustice Evelyn Lundberg Stratton

She was born to missionary parents in Bangkok, Thailand, and spent her childhood in Southeast Asia, attending boarding school in South Vietnam during the height of the Vietnam War, and later in Malaysia, coming to America periodically with her parents. At age 18, she returned to America alone with only a few hundred dollars in her pocket. She worked her way through school, receiving a Juris Doctor degree from The Ohio State University College of Law.

Justice Stratton's legal career began in the courtrooms of central Ohio as a trial lawyer. In 1989, as the first woman judge to be elected to the Franklin County Common Pleas Court, she presided over major cases ranging from capital murder trials to major civil actions. In her years on the bench, she established a solid record of judicial integrity, fairness, and diligence. Her approach to sentencing in serious felony cases earned her the nickname "The Velvet Hammer." Her work on the court led to her appointment, and subsequent election, to the Supreme Court of Ohio.

Justice Stratton is the wife of John A. Lundberg III, and the mother of two adult sons.

Justice Stratton enjoys painting, Thai cooking, and fly fishing with her husband. But surely her most interesting accomplishment was her first-place finish in a college Stampede Girls Goat Tying Competition - a talent she later put to good use as a trial lawyer.

Justice Stratton will address the ever-increasing importance of the Wittenberg Guild’s community scholarship efforts.  Sharing from her personal history, Justice Stratton will explain how the scholarship investment of a single individual allowed the daughter of Christian missionaries to attend college and become a Supreme Court Justice.

 

R.S.V.P. to Linda Himes at lhimes@wittenberg.edu or (937)327-7432

 

 

 

 

 



 
Copyright 2008 Wittenberg University Post Office Box 720 Springfield, Ohio 45501 800-677-7558
Non-discriminatory Policy      Web Use Policy & Disclaimer      Privacy Policy      © 2008 Wittenberg University