Douglas Alan Swanson Many people have shared messages of warmth and kindness regarding Doug's life and our loss. To view the messages click here.
Doug was born in Los Angeles on March 21, 1953. He grew up in the Chicago area and attended the Laboratory Schools of the University of Chicago. He graduated magna cum laude from the University of New Mexico and obtained his J.D. degree from Lewis and Clark Law School. He was admitted to the Oregon bar in 1980.
Doug practiced workers' compensation law, representing workers who were injured or disabled through their jobs. His firm is also noted for its personal injury work on behalf of plaintiffs, winning cases in the areas of product liability and tobacco litigation. The partners are supporters of a wide variety of issues and causes in pursuit of the public good. Swanson, Thomas and Coon recently purchased the historic Thomas Mann Building, at Southwest 2nd and Yamhill in downtown Portland. Doug had many interests and enthusiasms beyond his law practice. He was a noted joke-teller. Recently he was called into service to help a friend who walked a marathon. His duty, which he carried out with style and enthusiasm, was to walk with her during the last hour and tell jokes and stories to keep her spirits up through the final tiring miles.
Doug was active in charitable, humanitarian and political work. He was on the board of a local non-profit, Green Empowerment, which provides support for renewable energy projects around the world. He was on the board of the Brain Injury Association of Oregon and did volunteer political and legal work for Pineros y Campesinos Unidos del Noroeste, representing Willamette Valley farmworkers. Doug also took many trips to wild areas to make trails, count birds, and otherwise show his love for wild areas, plants and animals. He was a former president of Oregon Workers' Compensation Attorneys (OWCA), a statewide association of claimants' attorneys. In 2001, he received the Douglas W. Daughtry Professionalism Award from the Workers' Compensation Section of the Oregon State Bar.
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