Longtime Tennessee civil rights lawyer George Barrett dies

photo Nashville attorney George Barrett appears at a news conference in this Wednesday, April 18, 2012, file photo taken in Nashville.

NASHVILLE - George Barrett, a longtime Tennessee civil rights lawyer known for handling a case that ultimately desegregated the state's public colleges and universities, has died. He was 86.

Barrett died Tuesday at a hospital, several partners of his Nashville-based law firm told The Associated Press.

In a career that spanned more than 50 years, Barrett also represented corporate whistleblowers, fought for labor rights and tackled securities fraud, his partners said.

He is perhaps best known as the attorney who filed a lawsuit in 1968 for then-Tennessee State University instructor Rita Geier, who accused the state of operating a dual system of higher education for minorities.

Geier, then 23, filed the lawsuit over the University of Tennessee's plans to develop a Nashville campus. She feared it would become a predominantly white school and that historically black Tennessee State would suffer. The case dragged on for 38 years, and the state ultimately agreed to provide millions of dollars to diversify public colleges and universities.

"Our friend 'The Citizen' George Barrett was an incredible force for good in many ways," said Tennessee Board of Regents Chancellor John Morgan, who oversees six state universities, 13 community colleges and 27 technical colleges.

Douglas Johnston Jr., a founding partner alongside Barrett at the Nashville-based firm Barrett Johnston Martin & Garrison, said Barrett was a giant of the civil rights movement "long before civil rights was something to be proud of."

Barrett's heritage growing up in a working-class, Irish-Catholic family drove his desire to work for the civil rights cause, Johnston said.

"As such, he was one of those who was always for the underdog, the working man," Johnston said.

U.S. Rep. Jim Cooper said Barrett cared deeply for the poor and downtrodden and championed their rights.

"No one can replace George Barrett in our community, but we should all try, because he made Nashville and Tennessee a better place to live," said Cooper, D-Tenn.

Barrett's father died when he was just a young child and he grew up in Nashville under the care of a grandmother and a mother, said partner David Garrison. He was greatly influenced by the labor movement, which provided jobs for his uncles on the railroads and helped send him to college, Garrison said.

Barrett spent a year at Oxford University in England and was a member of Vanderbilt Law School's famed class of 1957, which also included a Watergate prosecutor and a federal judge, according to the law school's website.

Garrison said Barrett worked six days a week and was "a tireless advocate."

"There were never any cases too mundane or too big that he wanted to be involved in, this year included," Garrison said. "George was a lawyer who enjoyed taking on some of the most controversial and challenging cases. The more controversial it was, the more he looked forward to fighting the fight."

Barrett also became involved in politics, working at one point for Democratic Tennessee Congressman Carey Estes Kefauver and Al Gore Sr., Garrison said.

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