Former Smithsonian Chancellor

Retired Chief Justice Warren Burger
Eulogized By Washington Dignitaries


Former Supreme Court Chief Justice Warren E. Burger, who was also former Chancellor of the Smithsonian Institution's Board of Regents, was eulogized June 29 by a congregation of Washington dignitaries.

Burger, who died June 25, was the nation's 15th chief justice, serving for 17 years, the longest tenure this century.

"History will record that Warren Burger was one of the greatest chief justices," said federal appeals Judge J. Michael Luttig, a longtime friend who once clerked for Burger.

More than 800 dignitaties, including President Clinton, Attorney General Janet Reno and 13 sitting and retired Supreme Court justices attended the funeral services at Washington's National Presbyterian Church.

Born in Saint Paul, Minn. Sept. 17, 1907, he worked his way through law school there and became active in Republican politics under Harold Stassen, serving as his floor manager at the 1948 and 1952 Republican conventions. In 1955, President Eisenhower appointed Burger to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia. President. Nixon named him to succeed Earl Warren as chief justice in 1969.

Burger retired in 1986 to head a commission celebrating the Constitution's bicentennial.

"He left his mark on every facet of our judicial system," said Associate Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, who noted he was "kind and considerate" to her from her first day on the court, when he led her by the arm to face "the battery of press."

She noted that he wrote more than 250 opinions, including landmark decisions that enhanced women's rights and strengthened the constitutional separation of powers.

Supreme Court Chief Justice William Rehnquist, who succeeded Burger said, "I expected him to be stiff and formal, as I expected all chief justices were. I could not have been more wrong."

President Clinton, sat in the front pew, but did not speak at the services. The other members of the Supreme Court and members of Congress also filled the church.

He was buried at Arlington National Cemetery.



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