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The lasting legacy of a prominent civil rights activist in Ventura County

Democratic Congresswoman Julia Brownley of Westlake Village with the Hatcher family at the designation ceremony in Oxnard on Tuesday
Caroline Feraday
/
KCLU
Democratic Congresswoman Julia Brownley of Westlake Village with the Hatcher family at the designation ceremony in Oxnard on Tuesday

John R. Hatcher III's name now forms a permanent part of the community in Oxnard.

It was a moment to celebrate, commemorate and reflect.

John R Hatcher III’s family and dignitaries were on hand to honor the lasting legacy of a man who spent his life fighting for equality in Ventura County during a designation ceremony for the newly renamed, John R. Hatcher III Post Office Building at 1961 North C Street in Oxnard.

"He was such an icon in the country with regards to the Civil Rights movement and a huge leader here in the county," explained Democratic Congresswoman Julia Brownley of Westlake Village.

Brownley introduced legislation to designate a US Post Office in Oxnard the John R Hatcher 3rd Post Office Building, and the bill was signed into law on December 27, 2022 by President Biden.

"The significant part is that this is the first Federal Building in Ventura County named after a Black man," said his daughter Regina K Hatcher-Crawford Hatcher.

Hatcher was himself the son of a civil rights leader in Birmingham, Alabama, during the Jim Crow era. He was a member of the NAACP for more than 60 years, nearly four decades of which he served as president of the Ventura County Chapter. But Regina K Hatcher-Crawford Hatcher, also called him daddy.

"As a father he was very firm but also a comedian," she remembered.

"His belief was paying it forward, always making sure that people were heard. And more importantly, looking for ways to make everyone's life a little bit better," she said.

His widow, JoAnne E Hatcher said that her late husband was a humble man.

"He would be proud but he never seeked to have recognition," she said.

The Mayor of the City of Oxnard, John Zaragoza remembers Hatcher as a dynamic problem-solver who was an advocate for all.

"John was always the type of person who had solutions, recommendations," he said. "He protected not only African-Americans, Mexican-American - different ethics groups - whites and all."

And the man who had spend decades as a fearless advocate for the community, now will live on as a permanent and prominent fixture for decades to come.

Caroline joined KCLU in October 2020. She won LA Press Club's Audio Journalist of the Year Award in 2022, 2023 and 2024.

Since joining the station she's won 10 Golden Mike Awards, 6 Los Angeles Press Club Awards, 2 National Arts & Entertainment Awards and a Regional Edward R. Murrow Award for Excellence in Writing.

She started her broadcasting career in the UK, in both radio and television for BBC News, 95.8 Capital FM and Sky News and was awarded the Prince Philip Medal for her services to radio and journalism in 2007.

She has lived in California for eleven years and is both an American and British citizen - and a very proud mom to her daughter, Elsie.