Richard Behrens Eaton was born
December 22, 1914 in Albany, Oregon where his parents were living. His
father, Walter McCrum Eaton, had worked two years at Coram Smelter and
returned to Shasta County in 1913 to marry Edna Mabel Behrens at her father's
home in Redding.
When Walter Eaton died in military
service in 1918, Edna returned to Redding to be with her friends and family.
Richard had more adult contacts than other children. Though it was a household
of women, discipline was strict. Edna laughed affectionately about seeing
Richard
pedaling furiously to beat the deadline for getting home from swimming
in the Sacramento River.
Richard spent only six years
in Redding Elementary School -- No kindergarten, skipped second grade and
a special two-year program telescoped grades six, seven and eight. Richard
graduated from Grammar School in 1926, from Shasta High School in 1930,
from Stanford in 1934 and in 1938 received his professional degree from
that institution. The next two years he served as a law clerk for Jesse
W. Carter, as an associate in Glenn D. Newton's office and in his own private
practice.
In 1940, with war imminent he
went on active duty as a 1st Lieutenant in the Army of the United States.
He served in East Africa, North Africa, Sicily, and Italy, receiving three
battle stars and a decoration. He left Active Duty in 1946 and in 1964
retired from the Reserve as a Lt. Colonel.
Returning to civilian life in
1946. Richard reopened his office and in 1948 he became United States Commissioner;
in 1950, he became Justice of the Peace and City Judge of Redding. Then
in 1951, Governor Earl Warren appointed him Judge in th e newly-created
Second Superior Court in Shasta County. Judge Eaton served twenty-five
years in that post, having been reelected unopposed four times; during
that period he had served in thirteen other counties and the 3rd District
Court of Appeal. He then retired. But not from public service. He continued
in his service to the Boy Scouts of America, to the Episcopal Church and
performed frequent weddings. He has been a Master Mason since 1940, served
as Chaplain of the Royal Arch Masons since 1948 and on the Jurisprudence
Committee of the Grand Lodge of Masons for thirty-one years. He has talked
to classes at Shasta College and students at the Whiskeytown Environmental
School.
And all the while he advised
the Shasta Historical Society and from time to time has written for the
Covered Wagon. He died July 29, 2003 at age 89.
Source: Shasta Historical Society - Aug. 2002
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