- Barefoot Sanders
Infobox Judge
name = Harold Barefoot Sanders Jr.
imagesize =
caption =
office = United States District Judge, N.D. Texas
termstart = 1979
termend =July 7 ,2006
nominator =Jimmy Carter
appointer =
predecessor =
successor =
office2 =
termstart2 =
termend2 =
nominator2 =
appointer2 =
predecessor2 =
successor2 =
birthdate = birth date|1925|2|5
birthplace = flagicon|Texas Dallas,Texas
deathdate = death date and age|2008|9|21|1925|2|5
deathplace = Dallas, Texas
religon =Methodist
spouse = Jan Scurlock Sanders
children = Janet Lea, Martha Kay, Mary Frances, Harold, III
alma_mater =University of Texas
University of Texas School of Law
religion =Harold Barefoot Sanders, Jr. (
February 5 ,1925 —September 21 ,2008 ) was a longtimeUnited States District Judge and counsel to PresidentLyndon B. Johnson . He was best known for overseeing the lawsuit to desegregate theDallas Independent School District .Judge Sanders was married to the former Jan Scurlock. He and his wife had four children and nine grandchildren. His oldest daughter, Janet, is a Superior Court Judge in
Massachusetts .Biography
Early years and education
Sanders was born in Dallas to H.B. Sanders, I, and the former May Elizabeth Forrester. He graduated from
North Dallas High School in 1942. He served in theUnited States Navy duringWorld War II between 1943 and 1946.While attending the University of Texas, Sanders was elected student body president in 1947. He was affiliated with Blue Key,
Phi Delta Phi , andPhi Delta Kappa . He wasMethodist .Sanders received an A.B. degree from the
University of Texas in 1949, and a J.D. in 1950 from theUniversity of Texas School of Law . He was in private practice with the Dallas law firm of Clark, West, Keller, Sanders and Butler from 1950 through 1961 and from 1969 until 1979.ervice in the Texas House of Representatives
A Democrat, Sanders served in the
Texas House of Representatives from 1953-1959. During his tenure in theTexas Legislature , he sponsored the Texas Securities Act, the Texas Probate Code, the Texas Mental Health Code, and legislation creating the Trinity River Authority.United States Attorney
In 1961, U.S. President
John F. Kennedy appointed SandersUnited States Attorney for the Northern District of Texas, a position he held until 1965.During his time as
U.S. Attorney for the Northern District (in Dallas), Sanders played a minor role in the transition of power between Presidents Kennedy and Johnson followingKennedy's assassination in Dallas onNovember 22 ,1963 . Sanders was, according to an interview, [http://www.abota.org/_images/mediacenter/vd_2002_fall_Barefoot%20Sanders(1).pdf Abota website] ] tasked with finding Federal District JudgeSarah T. Hughes to administer theoath of office to Johnson:ervice in the Johnson administration
From 1965 to 1967, Sanders served as Assistant Deputy Attorney General and Assistant Attorney General in the
U.S. Department of Justice in Washington and was instrumental in the passage of theVoting Rights Act of 1965 . In 1967, President Lyndon Johnson appointed him Legislative Counsel to the President to manage the White House legislative program.United States Senate campaign
In the 1972 Democratic primary, Sanders faced former Senator Ralph William Yarborough of Austin for the right to challenge two-term
incumbent RepublicanJohn G. Tower in thegeneral election . Yarborough had lost his seat in the primary in 1970 toLloyd M. Bentsen of Houston. Yarborough was the established leader of the Texas liberal Democraticfaction , nearly won in the first balloting, but Sanders fared sufficiently strong to force him into a runoff. In the second primary, Sanders prevailed, 1,008,499 (52.1 percent) to Yarborough's 928,132 (47.9 percent). ["Congressional Quarterly's Guide to U.S. Elections", p. 1426]In the general election campaign, Tower attempted to link Sanders, also considered a liberal by Texas standards with the Democratic presidential nominee, then U.S. Senator
George McGovern ofSouth Dakota , who was waging an uphill challenge toRichard M. Nixon . In hismemoirs , "Consequences: A Personal and Political Memoir", Tower recalled: I linked Harold Sanders to McGovern whenever I could. I hungAttorney General Ramsey Clark around his neck. Clark was an old associate of Sanders's and had made a $2,000 contribution to the Sanders campaign. 'I'm glad, one of my standard zingers went, 'that Ramsey Clark is supporting my opponent, an old crony of his. . . . Frankly, I don't welcome the support of anyone who goes toHanoi and condemns our country.'" [John G. Tower, "Consequendes: A Personal and Political Memoir", Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1990, p. 208] In the campaign, Tower prevailed by 311,000 votes, the high-water mark of his electoral career. Tower received 1,822,877 votes (53.4 percent) to Sanders's 1,511,985 (44.3 percent). Six years later in 1978, Tower edged the DemocraticU.S. Representative (later appointed Senator)Bob Krueger by only 12,227 votes. ["Congressional Quarterly's Guide to U.S. Elections", p. 1353]Tenure as a Federal Judge
In 1979, Sanders was appointed United States District Judge for the Northern District of Texas by President
Jimmy Carter . Sanders served as Chief Judge of the Northern District of Texas from 1989 until 1995.During his tenure as a federal district judge, Sanders held many positions on committees related to the function of the judiciary. He has served as Chair of the Judicial Conference Committee on the Judicial Branch (1994-97); as a member of the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation (1992-2000); and as Chair, National Conference of Federal Trial Judges, American Bar Association (1988-89).
Sanders announced he would step down from the bench (after earlier having taken Senior Status) on July 7, 2006. [ [http://www.dallasblog.com/dallas-blogs/NaN/NaN/NaN/barefoot-sanders-steps-down.html Dalls Blog website] . ]
Role In Dallas ISD Desegregation Lawsuit
Though Sanders handled thousands of civil and criminal cases during his tenure as a Federal Judge, he is best known in Texas for his role as judge in the "Tasby" litigation brought against
Dallas Independent School District in the 1970s, in which plaintiff Sam Tasby charged that the DISD was still a segregated school district. The litigation began before Sanders became a federal judge, but he took over the case until its conclusion in 2003, and had oversight of many Dallas ISD activities related to racial balance until that time. Though the Tasby litigation was not the first desegregation lawsuit against DISD, it is the most famous.Until 1961, Dallas was the largest city in the South with a segregated school system [ [http://library.law.smu.edu/disd/background.shtm SMU Underwood Law Library] ] . That same year, the DISD school board implemented a desegration plan—the so-called "Stairstep Plan"—under order of the
Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals . In September of that year, eighteen black students started first grade classes in what had been whites-only institutions.In spite of tremendous dissatisfaction with DISD and continual complaints by the Dallas
NAACP , DISD declared itself desegregated in 1967. Litigation that continued for three more decades proved that declaration inappropriate.Sam Tasby filed a lawsuit against DISD charging discrimination prohibited under
Brown v. Board of Education onOctober 6 ,1970 . Federal JudgeWilliam M. Taylor presided over a trial of the case fromJuly 12 toJuly 16 ,1971 , and ordered the school district to come up with a new desegregation plan, which the district published onJuly 23 ,1971 .Four years later, in July 1975, the
United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit rejected several parts of the plan and ordered a new desegregation plan implemented by January 1976. Other parties, including the NAACP, were added to the suit.On
February 2 ,1976 , Judge Taylor presided over a second desegregation trial, and by April, a new desegregation plan was issued. The Fifth Circuit rejected most of this plan as well. The most controversial part of this plan centered aroundbusing , and Judge Taylor held an additional hearing on the case. Taylor removed himself from the case onMarch 21 ,1981 , to "avoid any further possibility that a desegregation plan might be overturned [ [http://library.law.smu.edu/disd/background.shtm SMU Underwood Law Library] ] ," and the case was assigned to Judge Sanders.After additional hearings, Sanders ruled that DISD continued to show signs of
racial segregation , but concluded thatbusing would not solve the problem. He ordered parties to submit newdesegregation plans, and then issued his own, ordering [ [http://library.law.smu.edu/disd/background.shtm SMU Underwood Law Library] ] :"This Judgment constitutes the Desegregation Plan for the Dallas Independent School District ("DISD" or "the District") and is rendered pursuant to, and is to be construed in the light of and consistent with, (1) the Court’s Memorandum Opinion dated August 3, 1981; (2) the Stipulation dated December 1, 1981, and approved by the Court on December 2, 1981; and (3) the Court’s Memorandum Opinions and Orders dated December 7, 1981; December 21, 1981; January 4, 1982; and February 1, 1982. This Judgment supersedes the final judgment rendered by this Court in 1976. All programs provided for in this Judgment must be initiated by the beginning of the DISD 1982-83 school year, or sooner if feasible, unless otherwise herein provided."
The school district fought Sanders decision until August, 1983, when the Fifth Circuit upheld Sanders' plan; at that time, the DISD board of trustees unanimously accepted the court's decision.
DISD remained under Sanders' oversight until he declared it desegregated.
Decades of oversight finally came to an end in 2003, when Sanders ruled that DISD was no longer subject to his oversight and was desegregated [ [http://library.law.smu.edu/disd/background.shtm SMU Library SMU Underwood Law Library] ]
"The segregation prohibited by the United States Constitution, the United States Supreme Court and federal statutes no longer exists in the DISD..."
Sanders's work in the desegregation case made him the occasional target of hostile
telephone calls and letters. He once said that Dallas was accustomed tosegregation , and many whites were content with the status quo. [Sandersobituary , "Houston Chronicle",October 1 ,2008 :http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/deaths/6014904.html]References
External links
* [http://www.txnd.uscourts.gov/judges/sanders.html Northern District of Texas biography]
* [http://www.fjc.gov/servlet/tGetInfo?jid=2096 Federal Judicial Center profile]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.