James D. St. Clair

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James Draper St. Clair

Birthdate:
Death: March 10, 2001 (80)
Immediate Family:

Son of Clinton Draper St. Clair and Margaret J. Glenn
Husband of Asenath Nestle

Managed by: Private User
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About James D. St. Clair

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_D._St._Clair

James D. St. Clair (April 14, 1920 – March 10, 2001) was an American lawyer, and practiced law for many years in Boston with the firm of Hale and Dorr. He lived in Wellesley Hills, MA for nearly 5 decades until his death.

He first gained notice while assisting Joseph Welch in the Army-McCarthy Hearings of 1954. (It was initially planned that he would share that role with Fred Fisher, and it was Fisher whom Joseph McCarthy attacked, eliciting Welch's "Have you left no sense of decency?" speech).

Much later in this his career he was Richard Nixon's counsel, most notably before the United States Supreme Court in United States v. Nixon, where he said,

The President wants me to argue that he is as powerful a monarch as Louis XIV, only four years at a time, and is not subject to the processes of any court in the land except the court of impeachment.

He also represented the president before the House Judiciary Committee during the impeachment process against Richard Nixon.

James Draper St. Clair was born on April 14, 1920, in Akron, Ohio. He was raised in Illinois, graduating from Moline High School, Moline, IL, in 1937, and studying at Augustana College, the University of Illinois and Harvard Law School.

http://www.harvardsquarelibrary.org/biographies/james-st-clair/

James D. St. Clair was described by The New York Times as a Boston trial lawyer who, in a career spanning half a century, “developed a reputation as a dignified, courteous, highly competent advisor to a wide range of clients who spanned the political spectrum.”

To Rev. Robert F. Drinan, a former congressman who is now professor of law at Georgetown University Law Center, “James St. Clair was my idol as to what lawyers should do… He represented the president of the United States, and he never said a word to anybody, never went on the talk shows, never wrote a book… He was like a priest or a psychologist.”

And to his law-firm colleagues and friends at Hale and Dorr LLP, St. Clair was “a living legend,” in the words of managing partner William Lee. Jerome Facher, another Hale and Dorr partner who was portrayed by Robert Duvall in the movie A Civil Action, called St. Clair simply “the best trial lawyer I’ve ever known.”

James Draper St. Clair, born in Akron, Ohio, was a graduate of the Harvard Law School who served in the Navy during World War II. Mr. St. Clair first came to national prominence during the Army-McCarthy hearings. Winning praise from many liberals for his role in ending McCarthy’s anti-Communist witch hunt, Mr. St. Clair insisted, according to The Boston Globe, “on accepting clients from across the ideological spectrum,” and that “he cast himself as a dispassionate counselor for people enmeshed in some of the most politically and socially polarizing cases of the century.”

Widely known during Watergate as President Nixon’s lawyer, Mr. St. Clair also represented documentary filmmaker Frederick Wiseman when Titicut Follies, Wiseman’s expose of conditions at Bridgewater State Hospital, was banned in Massachusetts. In 1968 he defended Yale’s chaplain, the Rev. William Sloane Coffin, Jr., when he was brought to trial for advising young men to burn their draft cards during the Vietnam War.

http://www.nytimes.com/2001/03/12/us/james-st-clair-nixon-s-waterga...

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James D. St. Clair's Timeline

1920
April 14, 1920
2001
March 10, 2001
Age 80