About Stephen
Stephen Morrow built his path to the law in two northeastern classrooms. He completed undergraduate studies at Dickinson College and earned his J.D. from New England Law | Boston in 2002. The timing of his degree set the stage for a regional practice that spans state and federal courts.
He practices as a lawyer at Rhoades & Morrow. Over the years he has gained admission to the bars of Massachusetts and Delaware, and he is also admitted to the U.S. District Court for the District of Delaware. That combination allows him to move between state-level matters and federal filings in Delaware’s courts.
Morrow’s work life is keyed to litigation and trial practice. Colleagues describe his approach to case preparation as methodical. He handles disputes that reach courtroom settings and administrative hearings. He sits in leadership positions outside the office as well. He is the president elect of the Delaware Trial Lawyers Association and serves as chair of the Workers’ Compensation Section of the Delaware State Bar Association. These roles place him in regular contact with trial lawyers, judges and regulators across the state.
The offices he operates from reflect the geographic sweep of his practice. He works out of Rhoades & Morrow’s Wilmington office and maintains presence at the firm’s Bear and Milford offices. Those locations enable him to serve clients in urban and suburban parts of Delaware, and to attend hearings and mediations in multiple venues without long travel.
Peers point to his involvement in professional organizations as part of his routine. Serving in elected and appointed roles at state bar sections and trial lawyer groups gives him a platform to influence procedural and practice issues. It also means he frequently contributes to internal panels, member meetings and continuing legal education programs that address trial strategy and workers’ compensation law.
Outside of formal roles, his practice is organized around representing clients in contentious settings where procedural rules and evidentiary decisions matter. He prepares pleadings, argues discovery disputes, represents clients at trials and appears in federal court when cases require it. The combination of state bar memberships, federal admission and active roles in professional groups defines the practical contours of his work.
As of 2026 he continues to work at Rhoades & Morrow, maintaining offices in Wilmington, Bear and Milford, and focusing his practice on trial litigation and workers’ compensation matters.