Francis Muir Scarlett | |
Office: | Senior Judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Georgia |
Term Start: | August 2, 1968 |
Term End: | November 18, 1971 |
Office1: | Judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Georgia |
Term Start1: | February 14, 1946 |
Term End1: | August 2, 1968 |
Appointer1: | Harry S. Truman |
Predecessor1: | Archibald Battle Lovett |
Birth Name: | Francis Muir Scarlett |
Birth Date: | 9 June 1891 |
Birth Place: | Brunswick, Georgia |
Education: | University of Georgia School of Law (LL.B.) |
Francis Muir Scarlett (June 9, 1891 – November 18, 1971) was a United States district judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Georgia.
Born in Brunswick, Georgia, Scarlett received a Bachelor of Laws from the University of Georgia School of Law in 1913. He was in private practice in Brunswick from 1913 to 1946. He was solicitor for the City Court of Brunswick from 1919 to 1929.
On January 24, 1946, Scarlett was nominated by President Harry S. Truman to a seat on the United States District Court for the Southern District of Georgia vacated by Judge Archibald Battle Lovett. Scarlett was confirmed by the United States Senate on February 13, 1946, and received his commission on February 14, 1946.
Scarlett was among the most staunchly segregationist district court judges during the Civil Rights movement. After Brown v. Board of Education, Scarlett attempted to relitigate because he believed that black people were inherently inferior,[1] so that separate schools was a fair classification of students.[2] In Scarlett's view, separate school systems were thus fair because both races would be harmed by
His persistent efforts to thwart black plaintiffs in Chatham, Glynn and Richmond Counties would ensure that no integration took place there until long after it had occurred in most of the Deep South.[3] When in 1963 Scarlett found that the Chatham County schools were segregated, he allowed a group of white students to intervene and present evidence that black students could not work academically nearly as well as white students.[2] In Scarlett's view, black children's sense of rejection by white children was increased by intermixture, and the increase in sense of rejection was in his view proportional to the amount of interaction between white and black children.[2] Scarlett ordered students to be assigned according to intelligence tests, and teachers to be assigned and paid according to their own intelligence.[2]
Elbert Parr Tuttle, one of the “Fifth Circuit Four”, referred to Judge Scarlett as
Scarlett would be reversed repeatedly by the Fifth Circuit during the middle 1960s, and by the middle of 1968 he was under pressure to take senior status as steps toward desegregation were finally taken. Scarlett assumed senior status on August 2, 1968, serving in that capacity until his death on November 18, 1971.
The Frank M. Scarlett Federal Building in Brunswick is named for him.