5 minute read

Hailing a Hero

Archie Creech: A Legal

Aid Society of Birmingham Hero

Archie is always eager to get to work.

” “Legal Aid represents children in the Jefferson County family courts in Birmingham and Bessemer. The clients range in age from birth to 21 years old.

His law office was totally destroyed. He could not get to it for weeks after Hurricane Katrina, a Category 5 hurricane that broke the levees in New Orleans.

“When I went to work the Friday before the storm, it was a Category 3 out in the Atlantic. It had to cross over Florida,” Archie Creech recalled that fateful day in August 2005.

Hurricanes typically lose strength over land. While in the Gulf of Mexico, Katrina strengthened to a Category 4 and was a Category 5 as it approached the northern Gulf Coast.

Because Archie and his wife, Jessie, had survived many hurricanes in the past, they had developed their own strategy for evacuations. They left late. They had done it before and encountered little to no traffic in the past.

But this time it was not easy leaving the Big Easy. It took them 19 hours to get to Birmingham. Along the route, they called friends to seek lodging. A friend said his in-laws in Birmingham would help them find a place. So, they loaded their band of Noah’s Ark — two parents, two children, two dogs and two cats — and headed to Birmingham.

During their time in Birmingham, what struck them most about the area was the beauty. They would marvel at the scenery as they walked their pets. What sealed the deal and made them want to stay was the friendliness of the people.

“We took the kids to school and were greeted with, ‘Are you the refugees from New Orleans?’ I said, ‘Yes, we are,” Archie fondly remembers. The school helped with furniture and other necessities.

“They were a life saver.”

Six weeks after Hurricane Katrina hit, Archie returned to New Orleans to assess the damage. Their home was situated 3 feet above ground, and the home had been filled with 6 feet of standing water.

“The first thing I noticed was the utter

Archie and his wife, Jessie. Archie working in his office on a typical day. After relocating with his family from New Orleans to Birmingham following Hurricane Katrina, Archie passed the Alabama Bar exam and set up shop as a solo practitioner. When a position became available at Legal Aid in the Jefferson County Family Court Division, Archie began his career as a full-time guardian ad litem in abuse and neglect (dependency) cases.

silence,” Archie says. “There were no sounds of birds chirping, dogs barking or cars driving by.”

Due to the swelling in the home from the water, Archie had to chop a hole in the front door to enter.

“I walked in and immediately walked out.”

Archie was in solo practice in New Orleans. His office was 10 minutes from his home. His house was two blocks from a levy that broke. When he was finally able to get to his office days later, there was nothing to salvage.

The verdict was in that Birmingham was going to be their new home. After passing the Alabama Bar exam, Archie set up shop again as a solo practitioner. Initially, he worked at Legal Aid as a contract attorney, filling in for attorneys in the Municipal Court Division.

After attending a Legal Aid Christmas Party with his wife, she told him, “You have found your people.”

When a position became available at Legal Aid in the Jefferson County Family Court Division, Archie began his career as a full-time guardian ad litem in abuse and neglect (dependency) cases.

“A huge portion of the cases involve parents being on drugs,” he explains. “Drugs are a beast and hard to overcome.”

Legal Aid represents children in the Jefferson County Family Courts in Birmingham and Bessemer. The clients range in age from birth to 21 years old.

Archie says, “When I wake up and go to work, I know that all day long I’ll be representing the good guys.” However, to Archie, the teenagers are the most challenging, not just because of their attitudes, but because of a lack in resources for that demographic.

He says, “Put a lack of resources on top of their life circumstances, and you have a recipe for failure.”

There is rarely a perfect situation; he has to advocate for what is in the best interest of his clients.

To decompress from the stress and demands from the weightiness of the job, Archie enjoys sports and gardening. He said he had to decide at the Alabama state line whether he was for Alabama or Auburn and what church he would attend.

No spoiler here. These are great conversation starters for when you meet Archie.

“When I wake up and go to work, I know that all day long

I’ll be representing the good guys. ”ARCHIE CREECH

Memorial Scholarship Contributions

Honor the life of a colleague or loved one through a gift to the Birmingham Bar Association Memorial Scholarship Fund. Your tax-deductible gift is used to award scholarships to second-year and third-year law students at Birmingham School of Law, Cumberland School of Law, Miles Law School and the University of Alabama School of Law.

Donations may be sent to the Birmingham Bar Foundation, 2021 Second Avenue North, Birmingham, Alabama 35203. For more information, please contact Jennifer Buettner at 205-251-8006, ext. 3 or jbuettner@ birminghambar.org.

We are thankful to the following generous donors for supporting this important scholarship program and carrying on a legacy of justice in future attorneys:

► In memory of Franklin Donnell Ball ○ The Honorable Robert P. Bynon

► In memory of Louis B. “L.B.” Feld ○ Massey, Stotser & Nichols, P.C.

► In memory of Judy Bonar ○ Robin L. Burrell

► In memory of The Honorable

Joseph L. Boohaker ○ John F. Whitaker

► In memory of George James Bouloukos ○ The Honorable Robert P. Bynon

► In memory of Robert Clair Boyce III ○ The Honorable Quentin Q. Brown

► In memory of Daniel Lee Burgess ○ The Honorable Robert P. Bynon

► In memory of Harlan Hobart Grooms ○ John F. Whitaker ► In memory of Hugh A. Locke Jr. ○ Dawn I. McDonald

► In memory of Jerry O. Lorant ○ John F. Whitaker

► In memory of William H. Mills ○ The Honorable Quentin Q. Brown

► In memory of Martha Jane Patton ○ The Honorable Quentin Q. Brown ○ William N. Clark

► In memory of Lee H. Stewart ○ Lee T. Clanton

► In memory of William James “Bill” Sullivan Jr. ○ John F. Whitaker

► In memory of Jon Batton Terry ○ William N. Clark ○ Massey, Stotser & Nichols, P.C.

► In memory of Lanny Sterling Vines ○ The Honorable Tom King Jr.