The civil rights legend born and raised in Santa Rosa

In 1962, segregationist groups in the American South came up with a plan to embarrass and undermine the Freedom Riders, the civil rights activists who had taken to the public transportation system to protest segregated bus terminals.

The idea, which would be echoed 60 years later by governors Greg Abbott of Texas and Ron DeSantis of Florida, was to offer bus tickets — accompanied by false promises of what awaited upon arrival — to African Americans willing to relocate to the North.

As a Black family of 10 boarded a bus in Shreveport in early 1963, headed for Trenton, New Jersey, the White Citizens’ Council of Louisiana announced three other Northern cities it planned to target. One of them was Santa Rosa, then a city of about 50,000.

It was not a random selection. The white supremacists had identified Santa Rosa because it was the hometown of St. John Barrett, second assistant attorney general in the U.S. Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division.

It was a modest job title, and Barrett is no household name in this newer era of civil rights clashes. But the Sonoma County native was a crucial figure in many of the landmark legal cases that helped African Americans gain access to public spaces, schools and ballots.

Barrett tried the first case the feds brought under the 1957 Civil Rights Act — a voting rights suit in Terrell County, Georgia. He successfully represented the government in its support of the “Little Rock Nine” in Arkansas in 1958 (arguing alongside the lawyer Thurgood Marshall, later a U.S. Supreme Court Justice), and brought charges against Lester Maddox, a Georgia restaurant owner who refused to serve Black customers, in 1964. Maddox would go on to become governor.

When James Meredith attempted to shatter an entrenched color barrier by enrolling at the University of Mississippi in 1962, St. John Barrett was at his side.

In his memoir, Barrett wrote, “I felt I was surfboarding the edge of a new wave of history.”

Those familiar with his work would agree. Barrett received a Civil Rights Division Association Lifetime Achievement Award in 1997.

“He was very well respected,” said Brian Landsberg, a professor emeritus at the University of Pacific’s McGeorge School of Law who worked with Barrett at the Civil Rights Division from 1964-67. “He was considered an expert on civil rights cases. He tried some of the major cases that the Ku Klux Klan and that sort were involved in.”

Landsberg is the author of a recently published book, Revolution by Law, on the historical significance of the Lee v. Macon County Board of Education decision, a school desegregation case in Alabama. Barrett argued that case for the Department of Justice.

Barrett wasn’t the first lawyer in his family, and he wouldn’t be the last. His father, Roe Barrett, was a Santa Rosa city attorney.

“One story, as told by our dad to us about his dad, was that he represented a client opposite Jack London in a case. I think it was a real estate case,” said James Barrett, one of St. John’s five children. “He prevailed. And Jack London was nonplused and not too happy — and not thrilled with the Barrett family.”

James added, “I’ve been to Jack London’s place nearby. And he did fine.”

James Barrett and his fraternal twin brother, David, are partners in the Washington DC office of Latham & Watkins, a global law firm.

St. John Barrett — his first name was the maiden name of his mother, Anna — grew up in the Junior College neighborhood and graduated from Santa Rosa High School. He studied math and government at Pomona College, got his law degree at UC Berkeley and was working as an assistant district attorney in Oakland when a former college friend recruited him to the Justice Department in 1955.

Two years later, the DOJ opened its Civil Rights Division to enforce the freedoms minority groups had begun to carve out. Barrett was one of the division’s original 15 lawyers. By the time he left a decade a later, there would be more than 100.

Barrett, who stood 6-foot-4, was known by all as Slim. He had a mild, businesslike persona that masked his reputation as an able trial lawyer.

Landsman recalled the first case he worked on with Barrett, U.S. v. Jefferson County (Alabama) Board of Education. The Justice Department had moved to secure a preliminary injunction against a large school system in Birmingham that was attempting to keep campuses white.

“We had a very antagonistic federal judge,” Landsman said. “I just admired the way Slim was able to present the case. The judge basically tried to shut down the hearing. Slim made it very clear we hadn’t finished presenting the case yet. The judge ruled against us, but we were successful on appeal.”

https://www.pressdemocrat.com/article/news/st-john-barrett-the-civil-rights-legend-born-and-raised-in-santa-rosa/