From Campus to Courtroom
September 5, 2024alumni
In an historic outcome for Nashville's judicial system, Stephanie Williams was elected this August as a judge in the Fourth Circuit Court, becoming the first African American woman to serve in that position.
Long before she took office, her unconventional path to the bench illustrated her determination and passion to fulfill a calling as a servant leader.
After graduating high school in 1992, Williams began attending Fisk University and soon became a mother to two children. She made a choice to leave school and focus on her new family. After years of balancing a variety of jobs, she ended up as a law clerk at an entertainment law firm, where owner Richard Manson saw her potential.
“One day he suggested I go to law school,” Williams said. “I told him I couldn't because I dropped out of college and didn’t even have a bachelor's degree, but he encouraged me.”
Williams began searching for an undergraduate program that fit her interests and career goals, and came across Trevecca’s Bachelor of Arts in management and human relations (now the Bachelor of Arts in management and leadership).
“At that time Trevecca was the only school with a program that catered to nontraditional students and working adults where you could go to school at night,” Williams said. “I was able to take one class at a time so I was not overwhelmed, and it was just a really great way for somebody like me to get back on track without going through the traditional hoops of attending school.”
After finishing all of her coursework in June 2000, she decided to pursue her law degree at the University of Tennessee, commuting from Nashville to Knoxville for two and a half years.
Williams’ career as a lawyer began at Manson's entertainment law office, but it changed focus when she realized the negative impact of the legal system on individuals, particularly in family law.
Inspired by her own experiences and in witnessing the impact of financial limitations on families in court, Williams decided to focus her career on equitable access to legal representation. She obtained grant funds from the state of Tennessee to start a practice, the Family Justice Center, where her passion could become her full-time work.
After several years at her practice, her career took another exciting turn. “In 2014, I was able to start a new position as a special master in the Fourth Circuit Court,” Williams said. “I was appointed under the elected judge, and I was able to work in that court to help implement new systems and learn as an understudy of the judge.”
The unexpected passing of that incumbent judge in 2022 created an opportunity for Williams to step into a new position as an elected official. She entered the race to fill the seat and found that she enjoyed campaigning, with every interaction reinforcing her belief in the importance of her work.
“You look at life through a different lens when you can take time to meet people from all different types of communities with different religious, cultural or socioeconomic backgrounds,” Williams said. “I learned the commonality in it all was family. We are all connected to family in one respect or another, and it was a wonderful experience to learn about what it means to serve and develop families in Nashville.”
Williams won the primary election within her own party, and then ran uncontested in the August 1 general election to become the new Fourth Circuit judge.
With plans to modernize aspects of court operations and increase accessibility through technology, Williams wants to ensure that the Fourth Circuit Court remains attuned to the needs of Nashvillians. “In many ways, the courts operate the same way today that they did 20 years ago,” Williams said. “But we have a responsibility to serve our community in a way that uses modern resources and technologies to increase efficiency.”
Williams was sworn in on August 25 and began her term on September 1.
At her request, Williams’ investiture ceremony took place on Trevecca’s campus, a tribute to the institution that launched her career and started her on a path to fulfilling her calling.
That full-circle moment was a celebration that neither she nor her Trevecca family will forget anytime soon.
Want to follow in Williams' footsteps?
Find out where a Bachelor of Arts in management and leadership could take you!