

2020, surrounded by his family. Bill was born in Houston, Texas on October
27, 1939 to Samuel Hoge Stradley and Mary Elizabeth (“Libby”) Mitchell
Stradley. He was an only child raised in the Montrose area of Houston and
attended Montrose Elementary, Lanier Jr. High School, and Lamar High School
(from which he graduated in 1958). Bill began college at the University of
Texas in Austin, where he met Emmalee, who would become his wife. Bill
then transferred to the University of Houston, from which he earned his BS
degree in 1965. He then earned his law degree from the University of
Houston Bates College of Law in 1967.
Bill and Emmalee were married in 1960 and were soon to celebrate their
sixtieth wedding anniversary. She survives him. Bill also is survived by their
daughter Lisa Stradley Bergez (and her husband Craig) and their son William
(“Bill”) Mitchell Stradley (and his wife Stephanie), as well as their five
grandchildren, Katherine (and fiancé Alex Cohn), Emmalee (and fiancé William
Holt), and Barrett Bergez, and Jackson and Jessica Stradley. Bill’s greatest
pleasures in life were times spent with his family.
Bill practiced law for nearly fifty years and was known for his integrity,
compassion, and humility. He spent his entire career as a personal injury trial
lawyer, proudly seeking to help injured Texans obtain just compensation for
their suffering. He started his career at the predecessor to the law firm Jamail
& Gano, spent many rewarding years at his law firm, Stradley, Barnett & Stein,
and then finished his career at the Mithoff Law Firm. Bill was Board Certified
in both Personal Injury Trial Law and Civil Trial Law by the Texas Board of
Legal Specialization.
He was a President and Director of the Houston Trial Lawyers Association, a
President of the Houston chapter of the American Board of Trial Advocates, and
a Director and Director Emeritus of the Texas Trial Lawyers Association. He
also served on many bar association committees, including the Houston Bar
Association Committee on Professionalism and the State Bar of Texas
Committee on Texas Federal Judiciary Appointments, as well as an
appointment to the Supreme Court of Texas Professional Ethics Committee. He
enjoyed mentoring other lawyers, and in the 1980s, he served on the advocacy
faculty for both the University of Houston Law Center and the South Texas
College of Law.
Bill’s community involvement included serving for many years (including as
President) on the City of Houston’s Mayor’s Police Advisory Committee (during
the administrations of Mayors Jim McConn and Kathy Whitmire, as a Director
of the Houston Council on Human Relations, and on the Administrative Board
of St. Luke’s United Methodist Church (alongside his friend Rev. James H.
Ellison).
Bill was a true gentleman and an all-around great guy. That was recognized
early by his high school classmates when they voted him Most Popular Boy of
his senior class, and often thereafter as he touched the lives of the people who
came to know him throughout his life. His idol, if he ever could be said to have
one, was the young Frank Sinatra, who he emulated reasonably well on a record
that Bill cut when he was in high school. He was deeply interested in
comparative religion and the history of World War II. He spent much of his free
time reading and studying those topics and reflecting on the meaning and life
lessons that they provided.
Bill had an almost spiritual way of making the people who had the pleasure of
spending time with him feel better about themselves. The world would be a
better place if the same could be said about more of us, particularly at this
stressful time in our existence. Hopefully, that part of Bill’s spirit has rubbed
off on the people who will miss him. His family will certainly strive to honor
that spirit, and will always remember him with a smile in doing so. We hope
that you will do the same.
Bill would appreciate any contributions in his memory to the charity of your
choice but would be particularly appreciative of any contributions made in his
memory to the Houston Area Parkinson’s Society. There are no services
scheduled at this time in light of current circumstances. We encourage you to
celebrate Bill’s life safely in whatever manner you would like.
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