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James Griffin blazed a trail for St. Paul’s Black police officers

M.Wright43 min ago
James Griffin fired his gun at someone only once during his 42 years as a St. Paul cop.

On a day off in September 1949, Griffin was heading back to his home at 587 Rondo Street after a movie when he learned a liquor store bandit had fatally shot a police detective and was holed up in a nearby apartment building. Tear gas had been fired into the room where the suspect was hiding under a bed.

"They had two gas masks and asked for volunteers," Griffin told me in 1999, still unsure why he'd raised his hand 50 years earlier. "Don't ask me why. After I started up the stairs, I said to myself I was probably the biggest damn fool in history. I was scared to death and could hardly breathe."

St. Paul police officers James Griffin and Vernon Michel, who donned gas masks to apprehend a liquor store bandit who fatally shot a police detective, September 1949. Griffin and fellow officers converged on the suspect, killing him in a 12-shot barrage. Seventy-five years later, Griffin popped into my mind for a far less dramatic but more noteworthy anniversary.

On Oct. 6, 1972, Griffin became St. Paul's first African American deputy police chief. The promotion came only after Griffin threatened to sue the city's Civil Service office for passing him over despite finishing first on the deputy chief exam.

"I've had to fight for everything I got in the police," Griffin said in a 1998 Minnesota Public Radio interview, four years before he died at 85.

The son of a Northern Pacific dining-car waiter, James Stafford Griffin was born in 1917 in the family home on Rondo, a Black neighborhood carved up in the 1960s to make way for Interstate 94. He attended Central High School, where the football stadium was named for him in 1988.

Griffin met his wife, Edna Smoot, when they attended West Virginia State College, a historically Black college, during the Great Depression. He left school early to find work, eventually receiving his degree from Metropolitan State University in St. Paul in the early 1970s.

From 1921 to 1937, the St. Paul Police Department hired no Black cops. When Griffin joined the St. Paul police in 1941 as a reserve patrolman at the age of 24, he joined only three other African Americans on the force. He walked beats in some of St. Paul's roughest areas because only white cops got to ride in squad cars.

Griffin confronted the chief about that discrimination and became the first Black officer to use a squad car in 1946. He went on to become the department's first Black captain in 1970, when only three of the department's 350 men were Black.

"Jim Griffin was a pillar in St. Paul who understood the down-low racism in the police department and knew how to navigate the St. Paul establishment," William Finney, who became the city's first Black police chief in 1992, told me during a recent phone interview.

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Mayo Clinic physician-scientist forged cardiovascular breakthroughs in flight, space Finney, 75, knew Griffin his whole life. Griffin and Finney's uncle, LeRoy Coleman, were old friends from Rondo. They all attended St. Philip's Episcopal Church on Mackubin Street in St. Paul.

St. Paul Deputy Chief James Griffin, October 1982. Finney explained how in 1972, when Griffin at first was passed over for deputy chief, Civil Service rules allowed for hiring any of the top three candidates ranked by test scores.

"But when Jimmy finished first on the deputy chief test, it was the first time in 30 years they hadn't just taken the top guy," Finney said.

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