Smith, Chesterfield H. 1917-2003.

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Smith combined a very successful private practice of law with a remarkable career working in the public interest. Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, a close friend of Smith, said about him, "He has devoted his extraordinary talent and enormous energy to the improvement of the legal profession - to making the profession more honorable, more responsive to the people law and lawyers serve. He is, in sum, among the brightest, boldest, bravest, all-around most effective lawyers ever bred in Florida and the U.S.A." His longtime friend Sandy D'Alemberte said above all Smith was forthright: "Whether he was with you or against you, it was always candid. When he believed something, he wasn't frightened to say it. A lot of his close friends were really conservative. But he was very outspoken and didn't trim his sails around people he knew didn't agree with him. He didn't have a sneaky bone in him. He would tell you what he was going to do. He would tell you what he thought you ought to do." In 1975, Time named Smith among 35 "non-candidates truly qualified to be president of the United States." Smith had very high standards, for himself and his lawyers, and believed that it is the obligation of lawyers to serve the public will.

Smith was born on July 28, 1917 in Arcadia, Florida, to Grace Gilbert Smith and Cook Hall Smith. His mother was a social columnist for the local newspaper and his father was an electrical contractor who became head of the Desoto County School System. Growing up in Arcadia, Smith, then addressed by his middle name Harvey, was a soda jerk at his uncle's drug store. His uncle, a state legislator, influenced Smith's interest in politics. In 1935, Smith moved away from Arcadia to attend the University of Florida. He was in and out of school, dropping out for a semester to make money to return. After receiving an Associate in Arts degree Smith joined the Florida National Guard which was mobilized for active duty during World War II in November 1940. He was assigned to the 94th Infantry Division of George Patton's 3rd Army and served as a captain for most of the war. His unit was sent into Normandy a month after D-Day and surrounded German submarine stations for approximately four months. They were then moved into Luxembourg and took part in the Battle of the Bulge. After the battle, the troops crossed the Rhine River and occupied the Ruhr Valley area until the war ended. In Germany and later Czechoslovakia, Smith served in the occupation forces. When he heard of conditions at a concentration camp, Smith ordered the camp's commanders to vacate their homes and move into the camps, while the camp prisoners moved into the commanders' houses. He was discharged in 1945 with the rank of major and a Bronze Star. On his way back home he won $4,000 playing craps. His winnings and the G.I. Bill financed his postwar education. He attended law school at the University of Florida, and graduated at the top of his class in only two years, in 1948.

Smith and his wife Vivian (d. 1987) moved back to Arcadia where he joined the law firm Treadwell and Treadwell. He worked there for two years before being hired at Holland, Bevis, and McRae in Bartow. He made partner in three years and within seven years Smith was running the firm. Early on, Smith advocated that the firm represent the phosphate companies in the area. After a discussion with the other partners, during which Senator Spessard Holland claimed that the future of the firm was in citrus, Smith's view won out. The phosphate business allowed the firm to prosper, but Smith realized the firm needed to diversify. In 1968, he negotiated a merger with the Tampa firm of Knight, Jones, Whitaker, and Germany. Other mergers and acquisitions followed and Holland & Knight, as it was now called, became the largest law firm in Florida. Smith stressed the value of the firm but also cultivated a work environment that encouraged pro bono work and community involvement.

While working at Holland & Knight, Smith became more involved in organized bar activities. He was elected to the board of governors of the Florida Bar in 1958 and president in 1964. While he was president he led the charge to build a new Bar Center in Tallahassee and to create the Client's Security Fund, a monetary fund designed for people who had been hurt by unethical lawyers. Smith was made a fellow of the International Academy of Trial Lawyers in 1962 and the American College of Trial Lawyers in 1965. He also was appointed by Lewis Powell to the Availability of Legal Services Committee of the American Bar Association. This committee led to more pro bono work in firms and the creation of the Legal Services Corporation. Smith became a life member of the American Bar Association in 1966.

Smith was appointed chairman of the 37-person Florida Constitution Revision Commission by Governor Hayden Burns in 1965. Florida's constitution had not been revised since 1885 and its politics were dominated by a group of powerful rural legislators known as the "Pork Chop Gang." Smith led the Commission, a group with very strong personalities, into drafting a document that would best serve all the people of the state. In 1968 the new constitution was accepted by the voters with many of the changes that Smith had championed. These included: "one man, one vote" representation, provisions for citizens' review, and uniform rules of procedure in Florida courts.

In 1973 Smith was elected President of the American Bar Association. On October 20, 1973, during the height of the Watergate scandal, an event known as the "Saturday Night Massacre" occurred. When Special Prosecutor Archibald Cox subpoenaed tapes from President Richard M. Nixon for the Watergate investigation, Nixon refused and demanded Cox be fired. Attorney General Elliot Richardson and Deputy Attorney General William Ruckelshaus resigned rather than comply with Nixon's order. Finally, Solicitor General Robert Bork fired Archibald Cox. Smith, as the head of the largest professional organization of lawyers in the nation, felt that he needed to take a stand. He condemned "this defiant flouting of laws and courts," and issued a much quoted statement saying, "No man is above the law." Smith also called on Congress to reestablish the special prosecutor's office. Whatever the members of the ABA may have thought about Smith's statement, his outspokenness certainly got their attention. Smith received both praise and condemnation for his actions.

On the opening night of the 1974 ABA meeting in Hawaii, Smith delivered a speech he had crafted with Shirley Hufstedler advocating amnesty for Vietnam draft-dodgers in Canada and amnesty for President Nixon. Smith believed that the nation had suffered enough and it was time to come together and put it in the past. This speech was controversial but it set the legal underpinnings for the eventual amnesty of draft-dodgers. He stated that this speech had the greatest impact of any speech he had ever made, including the one after the Saturday Night Massacre. Whereas other ABA presidents had shied away from controversy, Smith did not let anything get in the way of what he understood to be right and just. Many of his colleagues considered him the most effective president in the history of the ABA. Smith's willingness to take a tough stance and his dedication to the pursuit of justice made him a nationally recognized legal figure. Smith pushed for legal help for people of moderate means, removing secrecy from choosing and disciplining judges, and placement of non-lawyers on grievance committees. He managed to do all this, as well as give 200 speeches and travel over 225,000 miles addressing law schools, bar associations, and legal groups.

Smith influenced political appointments and policy while simultaneously building a national law firm that made pro bono service and diversity cornerstones of the practice. He was a mentor to talented women and minority lawyers. People took notice, and Smith received much recognition throughout his career. Some of the awards he received include: the Great Floridian Award (1997), American Bar Association Medal Award (1981), the Distinguished Floridian Award from the Florida Chamber of Commerce (first recipient, 1969), Jurisprudence Award of the Anti-Defamation League (1992), American Judicature Society, Justice Award (2002), and the Nelson Poynter Award from ACLU. The Smith Center for Equal Justice at Legal Services of Greater Miami is named in his honor. He was also awarded twelve honorary Doctor of Law degrees and was appointed by several Florida governors and federal judges to commissions relating to the judiciary and the law. In 1978 he was inducted into the Bartow Hall of Fame.

In 1983 Smith stepped down as managing partner and chair of Holland & Knight. He kept a very active role in the firm and earned the nickname "Citizen Smith." In 1987 he married Jacqueline Allee, a former dean at St. Thomas University and a partner at Holland & Knight. In 1991 Governor Chiles appointed Smith to the Commission for Government by the People. Smith also chaired the Civil Justice Advisory Commission to the U.S. District Court of Southern Florida from 1991-1993. He died of cardio-vascular complications on July 16, 2003.

Sources: In addition to articles, oral history interviews and other biographical material found in the collection, these sources were consulted for information about Smith's life and career: Interviews conducted for Chesterfield Smith: A Great Floridian (Great Floridians series, Museum of Florida History/Florida History Associates, 1997), and The Greatest Generation by Tom Brokaw (New York: Random House, 1998).

From the guide to the Chesterfield Smith Papers, 1934-2008, 1971-1999, (Special and Area Studies Collections, George A. Smathers Libraries, University of Florida)

Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
creatorOf Chesterfield Smith Papers, 1934-2008, 1971-1999 Special and Area Studies Collections, George A. Smathers Libraries, University of Florida
creatorOf Smith, Chesterfield H. 1917-2003. Chesterfield Smith Papers, 1934-2008 (bulk 1971-1999). University of Florida
Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
associatedWith American Bar Association. corporateBody
associatedWith Holland & Knight (Firm) corporateBody
Place Name Admin Code Country
United States
Florida
Florida
United States
Subject
Bar associations
Bar associations
Judges
Judges
Lawyers
Lawyers
Practice of law
Practice of law
Watergate Affair, 1972-1974
Occupation
Activity

Person

Birth 1917

Death 2003

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