Trudy gave up on the idea of marriage when her fiancé died in the early forties. That loss, she says, reinforced her devotion to science and research. Besides, she points out, it wasn’t “an option open to women with careers. If a woman got married, she was often fired; if she had a child, no question—out she’d go. There was no such thing as maternity leave.”
Trudy goes on to say, “I’m supposed to be a role model for girls. I don’t know about that. What I like to do is encourage young women, and I think I succeed at that. I do tell them you can have both [motherhood and a career], but not a hundred percent of both. You can have maybe eighty percent of each.”
For her part, Trudy created an extended family. She notes that her brother, Herbert, a physicist living in California, “had the foresight to have four children.” There are also the graduate students she advises at Duke University Medical School and all those scientists who have worked with her over the years.
One of them, Dr. Thomas Krenitsky, who now has his own pharmaceutical company, is in awe of Trudy. “You have to remember,” he says, “when Trudy and Hitchings and their team started working with nucleic acids [in cells], we didn’t have any idea they were the chemical basis for heredity—that discovery came ten years later. They were way ahead of their time.
“She’s improved the human condition. Before, if you had leukemia—tough, you died. If you had kidney stones, if you had gout, if you had herpes—tough, you suffered. Trudy was a role model for women but she was a role model for men, too.
“She and George were more than just brilliant scientists—they were humanists. They were interested in the human condition—they weren’t out just for themselves.”
In 1988 George Hitchings and Trudy Elion, a team born out of the manpower shortage of the war years, won the Nobel Prize for Medicine, but it was not the ultimate recognition for their work. They both have said their greatest gratification comes from people whose lives were saved or whose suffering was relieved because of their devotion to the use of science to help people.
Still, Trudy wonders. “I don’t know if I would ever have gotten into a research lab without the men being gone.” So it is one of the many ironies of World War II. It was a terrible time of great suffering that also produced, in its own way, one of the great humanitarian scientists of the second half of the twentieth century.
CHESTERFIELD SMITH
“No man is above the law.”
NO MAN is above the law.” That was the simple and direct opening of a statement issued by the new president of the American Bar Association on the Sunday after the infamous Saturday Night Massacre, when Richard Nixon fired the Watergate special prosecutor, Archibald Cox, prompting Attorney General Elliot Richardson and his number one assistant, William Ruckelshaus, to resign. Nixon’s ambush of Cox was a startling and deeply troubling event. It did seem that this nation of laws was in a precarious state given the desperation and the power of the man in the White House.
I remember standing on the White House lawn that night, participating in a White House special report, when my colleague the late John Chancellor remarked, with chilling effect, “There seems to be a whiff of the Gestapo in the air of the nation’s capital tonight.”
Chesterfield Smith, a gregarious and prosperous Florida barrister, had been president of the ABA for only a month when Nixon rattled the country and the legal establishment with his imperious action. Outwardly, Smith appeared to be the quintessential establishment lawyer. His entrepreneurial ways had turned his law firm into a powerful money machine in Florida. He was a Democrat, but he had voted for Nixon over McGovern. After serving as president of the Florida Bar Association and chairman of that state’s constitutional revision commission, he had risen to the presidency of the ABA in record time.
Chesterfield Smith, Camp Phillips, Kansas, October 1943
Smith, however, was a leader in reforming the legal establishment. He was quick to recognize the greatly expanded enrollment of women in law schools in the late sixties and early seventies. He began recruiting them for his firm, reasoning, “It would be better to get a smart woman than a dumb man, right?” Smith grew up in the segregationist South, and yet he was among the first to recruit minorities for a mainstream firm. He installed pro bono legal work as a fixed part of the firm’s practice. In his unpaid role as chairman of the Florida constitutional revision commission, he took on what was called “the Pork Chop Gang,” canny legislators from sparsely populated north Florida who had controlled state politics for most of the twentieth century by beating back attempts to install one-man one-vote reforms. Smith won and helped make it possible for Florida to become a modern political state.
Smith believed so deeply that the law should always be viewed first as an instrument of public good and then as a means of making money that he refused to endorse his own firm’s largest client when the man was running for governor. One of Smith’s partner’s says, “We lost the client, but I guess Chesterfield just thought the other candidate was better.”
Nonetheless, it was a long journey for Chesterfield Smith, from an itinerant boyhood in central Florida to his role as the conscience of the nation’s leading legal organization on the weekend when the president of the United States, hunkered down in the White House, seemed to be sweeping aside the Constitution in his rage against his investigators. Curiously, Smith and Nixon had come of age in similar circumstances. They were two bright and ambitious men from families of modest means—one in Florida, the sunny land of promise on the southeast coast, the other in California, the warm-weather anchor of the West Coast. Smith and Nixon were both World War II veterans with law degrees. Each in his own way rose through the common and trying experiences of his generation to become prominent in his chosen field.
Smith says his father “had an up-and-down life.” He was a schoolteacher for a while, then ran an electrical appliance shop near the town of Arcadia when power first became available to the remote cattle ranches in central Florida. When Florida went through a boom-and-bust period in the twenties, Chesterfield’s father went out of business and on the road, looking for steady work. Eventually the family returned to Arcadia, where Smith finished high school at the top of his class without making much of an effort. He enrolled at the University of Florida as a prelaw student, but he’d stay only a semester at a time, dropping out to make money and raise a little hell. His childhood sweetheart, Vivian Parker, who was his wife for forty-three years before she died of cancer, was quoted as saying of Smith in those days, “He was just a poker-playing, crap-shooting boy who wouldn’t settle down.” Smith agrees that this is a fair and honest description.
By the time Smith was twenty, America had passed the Selective Service Act, and rather than wait to be drafted, Smith enlisted in the Florida National Guard, which was mobilized for active duty in November 1940. Smith finished his basic training in Florida and was then shipped out to Officer Candidate School at Fort Sill, Oklahoma, where he trained as an artillery officer. He became part of the new 94th Infantry Division, and after marrying Vivian Parker at Camp McClain in Mississippi, he was sent to join General George Patton’s 3rd Army in northern France about six weeks after D-Day. The poker-playing, crap-shooting boy from central Florida was in the thick of the war until the end, fighting across France and Belgium, participating in the Battle of the Bulge, then moving into Germany, the Ruhr Valley, and ultimately into Czechoslovakia.
By the time he was discharged, in the fall of 1945, he had been in the service sixty-one months, more than five years. He held the rank of major and had been awarded a Purple Heart and a Bronze Star. The circumstances of the wound that won him the Purple Heart are more dramatic than the injury. His outfit had paused along a major road en route to the Rhine River after the Battle of the Bulge. The men were out of their vehicles, resting, when suddenly never-before-seen airplanes appeared in the skies, the first jet fighters developed by the Germans.
Smith recalls, “They came roaring down the roads, strafing armored col
umns and people. I was one of the dummies. I remember being so amazed at seeing a jet plane I didn’t run, and my left shoulder got clipped by a machine-gun bullet. It didn’t hurt, but I did have to file a report, and that meant I got the Purple Heart. When VE Day came and they were sending people home on a point system, that little ol’ nick was worth ten points.”
Chesterfield Smith, wartime portrait
Chesterfield Smith, ABA president, 1973
When he did get home, Smith also had a new outlook on life. His wife said later, “Something happened to Chesterfield’s attitude in the war. I don’t know just what, but he was a serious man when he returned.” He had not given up all of his old ways, however. He won $4,000 playing craps on the twelve-day voyage home. When he added that to his $3,500 in saved military pay, he had a comfortable start for his postwar life.
Smith was eager to start anew. “The way I was going before the war, I don’t think I would ever have made it through law school,” he says. “But after the war I felt I had something invested in my country—five years of my life. I said to myself, Boy, you’ve got to settle down and make something of yourself, otherwise you ain’t ever going to ’mount to nothing.”
Smith applied his military discipline to his law-school and family schedules. “I was very regimented about my duties,” he remembers. “I worked from seven A.M. till noon.” Then, not completely forgoing his past, he played golf every afternoon, returning home around four o’clock to be with Vivian and their firstborn through dinner. In return for his golf time, he did the baby’s laundry; Vivian played bridge in the evening when Smith returned to his studies between nine o’clock and midnight. That was his schedule seven days a week. It paid off. Smith says, “I worked three hundred and sixty-five days a year and graduated in two years.”
“I was paid $115 a month under the GI Bill, and you could get by on that, but after about six months, when I got high grades, I became a student instructor and got another $90 a month. And we had almost $8,000 left over from the war—so we were doing fine. It was a methodical life, but we were men, not boys anymore.”
Smith graduated from law school with honors and was widely recognized as the class leader. He was a man in a hurry. “Hell,” he says, “here I was, almost thirty years old—I wanted to get that law license and get into a practice and make myself some money.” He returned to Arcadia, his hometown, and joined a small firm. Two years later he joined Holland, Bevis, and McRae, a larger firm in nearby Bartow. His new employers could not have known that hiring the handsome young veteran from Arcadia would change the destiny of their modest firm.
One of the firm’s leading clients worked with Smith shortly after he arrived in Bartow. He was impressed and went to the Holland, Bevis, and McRae partners with a message: “I’ve been your client for many years, but lately I’ve been dissatisfied. I like young Smith, however, and if you give him all of my work, well, I’ll stay with you. If not, I’m taking my business elsewhere.”
Smith was made a partner in record time. He was a primary force in getting the firm into the lucrative and growing business of representing central Florida’s phosphate industry; this proved to be a legal gold mine. At the same time, Smith was attracting a wide band of admirers. He was elected president of the Florida Bar Association, and that in turn led to his chairmanship of the state constitutional revision commission.
Simultaneously, Smith was becoming more involved with his profession through the American Bar Association. He met and became close to Lewis Powell of Virginia and Ruth Bader Ginsburg of New York, future justices on the U.S. Supreme Court. He says, “Powell appointed me to a committee called Availability of Legal Services. We made sure people who needed legal representation and didn’t know where to turn or couldn’t afford a lawyer, that those people could get a lawyer.” It was a radical idea at the time, but it changed the face of American law, leading to more pro bono work within established firms, legal ombudsmen, and the Legal Services Corporation.
Those were active years for Smith in his firm and in public service. He received no compensation for the sixteen months he directed the rewriting of Florida’s antiquated constitution. Besides establishing one-man one-vote, Smith installed provisions for periodic citizens’ review of the constitution and language that would make it impossible for a willful minority to amend the state’s fundamental laws for narrow, self-serving purposes. His law firm was thriving during Florida’s big-growth years, but Smith saw even more opportunity in a merger with a substantial Tampa firm, Knight, Jones, Whitaker, and Germany. The new firm became Holland and Knight, a veritable colossus of the law, one of the largest and most prosperous legal establishments in the country. It now has 734 lawyers in eighteen offices around the United States and in Mexico City.
In addition to its lucrative practice, Holland and Knight, under Smith’s sure hand, became a model of diversity. He is characteristically modest about his contributions. “It was the firm willing to do it,” he says. “I think the people at the firm learned that African Americans, that women, that Cubans, Israelis, Japanese, Koreans, could all make a contribution—not because of their race or gender but because they were smart and worked hard. Once we learned that, we didn’t have trouble with discrimination anymore. For example, I get a little more credit than I deserve for helping women. I was really kind to talented women. If they could help me, I could help them.”
One of those talented women is Martha Barnett, the first of her gender hired in the firm; she is now a partner in Holland and Knight. She remembers when Smith came back to the firm after his term as president of the ABA. He asked her to become his associate, to work solely with him. “It made all the difference in the world,” she says. “I was the first woman in the firm and there were some rocky times, but having Chesterfield select me . . . that was a statement to everyone that ‘I am going to make this work.’ He would introduce me to his colleagues around the country as his lawyer. That was a message that ‘This is a person I value.’ It gave me credentials.”
There’s another quality about Smith that Martha Barnett and others who know him volunteer, unprompted. “He’s the most gregarious person I’ve ever known,” Barnett says. “He invests his personal time and commitment to making people’s lives better. I don’t know how he finds the time. I am convinced he spends hours every day thinking of ways to make my life better. There are probably a thousand people who are convinced he spends his time trying to make their lives better.”
Bill McBride, now the managing partner of Holland and Knight, is one of Smith’s protégés. “I used to say that for the first two years I was with the firm I was convinced the first thing Chesterfield did every day while shaving was say, ‘What can I do for Bill McBride’s career today?’ The joke around here is that I’ll fire someone and they’ll hate me and hate the firm forever, but they’ll name their grandchildren after Chesterfield Smith.”
McBride grew up professionally at Smith’s side. They were in Chicago the weekend of the Saturday Night Massacre. “I was sort of his assistant—ran for Cokes, carried his briefcase, that sort of thing,” McBride says. “Mr. Smith, the morning after the Saturday Night Massacre, asked me if I wanted to join him at a Chicago Bears game. Of course all the talk that morning was about the events the night before.”
That talk went well beyond the Chicago headquarters of the American Bar Association, where Smith had been in office as president for only a month. In the nation’s newspapers, on the Washington talk shows—wherever people gathered—the stunning firings and resignations overwhelmed all other topics. Nixon and his staff were convinced they were well within their rights, that they could persuade the nation that Archibald Cox was a liberal Harvard lawyer bent on getting the president at all costs. It was a serious misreading of the public sentiment. I’ve always thought that that weekend was the moment when whatever public support Nixon had retained began inexorably to crumble. His actions seemed so desperate and self-serving that it was hard to believe he was acting only to pres
erve the integrity of the office.
Smith and McBride went to the game, the Bears against the Boston Patriots in Soldier Field, a world unto itself on autumn Sundays in Chicago, a place where Bears fans were single-minded about football, shutting out the rest of the world in their lusty cheers for “da Bears.”
Chesterfield Smith was in his seat, but his mind was on the events in Washington. Bill McBride watched his mentor closely. “You could tell his mind was somewhere else,” he recalls. “I think he said something like ‘I’ve decided what I’ve got to do.’ So we got up and left during the first half.” They went back to ABA headquarters and began gathering people. Smith was on the phone to prominent lawyers around the country, discussing the situation and describing what he was about to do. He wasn’t seeking consensus. McBride says, “He’d basically taken the position that the job was to be a spokesperson for what was right rather than what the establishment wanted. Most ABA presidents would have spent weeks debating that sort of thing. Not Mr. Smith.”
As Smith remembers that afternoon, “Lawyers—Republicans and Democrats—were calling me, saying, ‘What are you going to do?’I started drafting a statement I still like. It began, ‘No man is above the law.’ The next day it was on the front page of The New York Times and about eleven other major papers. We were the first large voice of a substantial organization that called for Nixon’s impeachment.”
Elliot Richardson, the attorney general who resigned rather than fire Cox, said later, “We, the people, at the end of the day had the final voice in what happened—we were given that voice by the leadership of the Bar, which itself was embodied in Chesterfield Smith.”
Smith then led the effort, through the ABA, to get an independent counsel to investigate Nixon. He became concerned, however, “when I learned that Leon Jaworski, a dear friend and a drinking buddy of mine, had gone to the White House and was to be appointed special prosecutor. I opposed it. Leon was a man I loved and cherished, but I believed that a special prosecutor should not be appointed by the man he’s investigating.”
Tom Brokaw Page 26