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Richard B. ("Dick") Johnson, Esq.
Richard
B. ("Dick") Johnson was admitted to the Massachusetts
Bar in 1939 after graduating from Harvard Law School. He joined
the Boston firm of Ropes & Gray that year, but his legal career
was almost immediately interrupted by military service in World
War II. Johnson commanded a platoon of infantrymen who crossed the
English Channel by glider and landed in Normandy on D-Day. Shot
through the ankles while leading his men across a heavily defended
causeway, he earned a Bronze Star for his bravery.
On
his return from the war, he began to specialize in real estate law
at Ropes & Gray. He became an active member of the Massachusetts
Conveyancers Association and was elected a member of the Abstract
Club. For many years, he supervised the work of former Land Court
Judge Marilyn M. Sullivan, who joined Ropes & Gray in 1951 in
order to assist him with real estate law work.
Ropes
& Gray made him a partner in 1960. Johnson was also active in
town affairs in his hometown of Swampscott, Massachusetts and served
as moderator for several years in the 1960s. He was a co-author
of Town Meeting Time which became the bible for town meeting moderators.
In 1967, together with Warren Carley, another partner at Ropes &
Gray, he drafted the first statute in Massachusetts authorizing
industrial development bonds which was designed to save the Fore
River Shipyard in Quincy.
Johnson
served as President of the Massachusetts Conveyancers Association
in 1971 and 1972 and his expertise in all aspects of real estate
law was generally highly regarded throughout the legal community.
He was also known as a man of great caring, kindness and wit and
also a person who was not afraid to directly confront and remedy
a problem with quick-thinking action. While leaving for lunch one
day, Johnson came across two bank robbers attempting to escape from
the lobby of the building which housed the State Street Bank. He
was able to trap one robber in the revolving doors of the building
and tackled the second would-be thief and holding him until the
police arrived.
In
1971 Johnson was diagnosed with cancer. He was in and out of the
hospital and his law office over the next several years, continuing
his endeavors with great courage. He died in 1977.
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