David Wellington Chew

David Wellington Chew

Chief Justice Chew was born in El Paso, Texas. He is the first son of Wellington Yee Chew, a prominent attorney and community leader, and Patricia Mary Chew, an elementary school teacher and principal, both deceased. Raised in Northeast El Paso and graduated from Irvin High School in 1966, he attended the University of Texas at El Paso for one year before accepting congressional appointment of Congressman Richard C. White to the United States Naval Academy. He graduated from the Academy with a Bachelor of Science in 1971 and was commissioned as an Ensign in the United States Navy. His first assignment was on the U.S.S. Claud Jones (DE-1033), homeported in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii as Communications Officer. In early 1972 he was fleeted up to Operations Officer, and, in that capacity, he participated in a WestPac deployment during which the Claud Jones was tasked as the principal interdiction/notification ship, under the direct operational command of Commander, Seventh Fleet, following the mining of Hai Phong harbor. Justice Chew was awarded the Navy Achievement Medal following the completion of that deployment. He also participated in four extended special operations deployments made by the Claud Jones before the ship was decommissioned and transferred to the Indonesian navy in 1974. Then Lieutenant Chew was selected for assignment as the Flag Lieutenant/Personal Aide to Rear Admiral Justin Langille, III, Commander, Cruiser Destroyer Group Twelve, homeported in Mayport, Florida in late 1974. As the Flag Lieutenant, he was embarked with the admirals staff on numerous ships including the aircraft carriers John F. Kennedy, Forrestal, and Independence and cruisers/destroyers Leahy. In addition to one deployment to the Mediterranean, he also participated in the exchange visit of the U.S.S. Leahy to Leningrad, USSR commemorating the 30th anniversary of the end of World War II. Chief Justice Chew, after leaving active duty, served in the U.S. Naval Reserve and commanded several naval reserve units. He attained the rank of Lieutenant Commander. Chief Justice Chew graduated from the Southern Methodist University School of Law in 1978 and returned to El Paso to enter into the private practice of law. He entered into partnership with Paul M. Douglass, who practiced with Justice Chew's father. Though they maintained a general law practice, both partners were board certified specialists in Immigration and Nationality Law. The firm expanded when Justice Chew's sister, Linda Yee Chew, joined the firm in 1985. He was also listed in the 1994/95 and 1995/96 editions of The Best Lawyers in America. In 2002, the Asian Pacific Islander Section of the State Bar of Texas established the "Justice David Wellington Chew Award" to honor an outstanding Texas Asian American lawyer each year. In 1989, he was elected to and served one term as the West-Central City Representative to the El Paso City Council. In 1994 Democratic primary and General Election, he was elected to the Eighth District Court of Appeals and sworn in on January 1, 1995. Since taking the bench and through December 31, 2006, he has authored over 1,200 opinions on the merits. In April 1999, he served on the Texas Supreme Court on two cases on the commission of Governor George W. Bush. In October 2006, he was appointed Chief Justice by Governor Rick Rick Perry. Chief Justice Chew is the first Asian American to serve as a chief justice in Texas and he is the highest ranking Asian American elected official in Texas. Chief Justice Chew is married to Mandy Chew who is the Director of Border Children's Health Center, a part of the Sierra/Providence Health Network. They have one son, Wellington Montgomery, who is a freshman at St Edwards University in Austin, Texas.

Area: Northeast / Franklin Mountains

Source: David Wellington Chew

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Report this entry

Choose the most important reason for this report

Your name

Your email address

Optional detail

Thank you for your report

More from the same community-collection

Large Cactus Flowers - El Paso, Texas - 2015

My wife Rosa Beste with real (not fake!) cactus flowers.

Poppies on the Franklin Mountains

Every spring our Franklin Mountains experience a covering of ...

Poppies on the Franklin Mountains

Poppies blooming on the Franklin Mountains.. March 28, 2010

Franklin Mountains

Mountain Biking 2011

McKelligon Canyon Amphitheatre

Music in the Canyon 2011. Band looks out onto audience at Mc ...

Franklin Mountain State Park

Old Tin Mine Road 2013

Star on Mt. Franklin, El Paso, TX circa 2015

Star on the mountain ---before sunset.

El Paso Wyler Aerial Tramway - 2009

El Paso Wyler Aerial Tramway - 2009

Hiking in the Northeast

Hiking near the mountains in Northeast El Paso. Rei and Ian ...

Hiking in the Northeast: break - El Paso, Texas

Hiking in December in the Northeast. Taken in 2014. Location ...

Fourth of July

Sparklers for 4th of July celebrations. 2014

Making Ice Cream

Fresh, home-churned ice cream was great on a hot day! Summer of ...

Carnival Rides

The carnival comes to the Northeast. 2014

Carnival Ride

Carnival ride from the carnival in the Northeast, 2014.

1947 Bowie High School

Bus in mountains photo in 1947 Bowie High School Year Book

Sugar Loaf Mountain - El Paso, Texas

Sugar Loaf Mountain in northeast El Paso off Alabama St., near ...

The famous Queen of the Night cactus flower

The flower of the Queen of the Night opens cactus one night in ...

Our native Claret Cup cactus in bloom

A Claret Cup cactus clump in our back yard - El Paso, Texas.

Franklin Mountains State Park Tom Mays Unit

The Tom Mays Unit on the Westside of the Franklin Mountains is ...

Franklin Mountains State Park Tom Mays Unit

The Tom Mays Unit on the Westside of the Franklin Mountains is ...

Franklin Mountains State Park Tom Mays Unit

The Tom Mays Unit on the Westside of the Franklin Mountains is ...

home.search_collection