Our Board Members

What is our purpose?

The St. Louis County Bar Association was founded in 1931 and is a public-oriented organization of attorneys and judges committed to improving the standards of the legal profession and the lives of the lawyers in this community and the people they serve.

Our History

HISTORY OF THE ST. LOUIS COUNTY BAR ASSOCIATION 1931 - 2008
In the year 1931, as the nation was engulfed by the Great Depression and St. Louis became known for being the largest Hooverville in the country, two historic events happened. First, Esther M. Golly had the honor of being the first female admitted to the Bar of the Circuit Court of St. Louis County (June 29, 1931) and became the first female member of the St. Louis County Bar Association. Secondly, Amandus Brackman had the distinct privilege of being elected the first President of the St. Louis County Bar Association. Brackman served as a St. Louis County Circuit Judge (1929-1930 and 1942-1954). Between 1931 when the County Bar Association was founded until its incorporation in 1941, the development, activities and history remain basically undocumented.

THE BAR INCORPORATION
During the summer of 1941, as the United States was moving closer to the brink of war, the St. Louis County Bar Association was incorporated. Upon being incorporated, the young association headed by E. McDonald Stevens, its President, a highly respected Missouri attorney, spearheaded the campaign for the creation of a county law library. On Saturday, July 12, 1941, upon motion of the St. Louis County Bar Association, the Circuit Court of St. Louis County sitting En Banc approved a contract entered into between the bar association and West Publishing Company for the purchase of law books for the newly established St. Louis County Law Library. Since the end of World War II, the County Bar has taken positions of conviction regarding the issues of the times. Such positions by the Bar have run the gamut from denouncing McCarthyism to advocating the adoption of the non-partisan court plan for St. Louis County.

THE BAR HONORS ITS MEMBERS
During the tenure of Hal B. Coleman as President of the Bar Association, the Executive Committee established the Roy F. Essen Award. Roy F. Essen was the owner and publisher of the Watchman Advocate. At the annual banquet of the Bar Association in 1959, Hal Coleman presented the first annual Roy F. Essen Award to J. Leonard Walther. Nine years later, during the tenure of Thomas P. Howe as President of the Bar Association, the Distinguished Service Award was established. Receiving the first Distinguished Service Award was Carl J. Teichman, the then publisher emeritus of the St. Louis Countian and St. Louis Daily Record. He is the only nonlawyer to receive the Distinguished Service Award. In 2004, the name of the award was changed to the Dudley C. Dunlop Distinguished Service Award in honor of a lawyer who personified the essence of the award.

THE GOVERNMENT CENTER

Since the founding of St. Louis County in 1877 and the establishment of the
County Courthouse in 1878, the population of the County and government had
increased at a phenomenal pace. By 1965, the need for adequate County government
facilities posed an acute problem and in 1967 the County electorate
passed the bond issue for a new St. Louis County Government Center.
On the weekend of January 1-2, 1970, the new St. Louis County Government
Administration Building was dedicated. Taking part in turning over the symbolic
key to Supervisor Roos and County Council Chairman Maurice Stewart were Paul
Brackman, President of the St. Louis County Bar Association, and the Honorable
Ninian Edwards who were chief lobbyist for the government center. Through the
relentless efforts of the County BarAssociation, the St. Louis County Government
Center became a reality. The present Courthouse was dedicated on November 23,
1971 and the County BarAssociation continues to maintain a lawyer’s room on the
third floor.

HIGHLIGHTS OF THE COUNTY BAR ASSOCIATION

By 1954, public indignation over the inability of the Sheriff’s Office to provide
law enforcement service prompted a citizens committee, along with the St.
Louis County Bar Association, to recommend the creation of the St. Louis
County Police Department through Charter amendment. The Department was to
have authority to enforce State Laws throughout the County; to enforce County
ordinances in the unincorporated areas; and to contract with municipalities for
some or all police services.

On November 2, 1954, voters flocked to the polls and overwhelmingly
approved the Police Charter amendment by a vote of 117,547 for to 24,091
against. Designed to take effect on July 1, 1955 it did, but not without legal
maneuverings in the Supreme Court of Missouri.

In 1962, William Shaw, the First Assistant Prosecuting Attorney of St. Louis
County was appointed to the newly created position of County Public Defender.
The establishment of the County Public Defender’s Office, the first in the history
of the State of Missouri, had been created through the diligent efforts of the
St. Louis County Bar Association.

The County Bar Association, which saw its efforts for a nonpartisan court plan
go down to defeat in the summer of 1968, achieved its long time goal in 1970.
After a lawsuit contesting the wording of the ballot by opponents of the plan had
been defeated in July 1970, voters flocked to the polls on Tuesday, August 4,
1970 and overwhelmingly approved the Missouri Plan for St. Louis County.
Three weeks after the election of jubilant Governor Warren E. Hearnes, he formally
proclaimed the nonpartisan court plan to be in effect in St. Louis County.
Had it not been for a civic-minded County Bar Association, the judiciary in St.
Louis County would not have been freed from the bonds of partisan politics.
Over the years, the Bar has always provided Continuing Legal Education for
its members and has supported the St. Louis County Judiciary and the court’s
staff.