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McClain WilliamGreat Living Cincinnatians

Judge William A. McClain
Retired Judge, Former Cincinnati City Solicitor
1913-
Awarded in 2003

When William McClain arrived in Cincinnati in 1937 by train, he couldn't catch a cab at Union Terminal. Not because there was a lack of taxis, but rather, because of the color of his skin. "When I got off the train at the terminal the cabs wouldn't pick me up," he recalls. "Cincinnati was one of the most segregated towns in the north."

"My early life was a struggle to overcome that," he adds.

Overcoming adversity has been a lifelong mantra for the determined and energetic lawyer and judge. Judge McClain excelled following graduation from the University of Michigan Law School in 1937. When he arrived in Cincinnati, the late Theodore Berry took the young attorney under his wing.

"I wouldn't be in Cincinnati if it wasn't for him," Judge McClain says of Mr. Berry, who later became the first black mayor of Cincinnati. "He was a mentor, a friend and a benefactor."

In the 20 years they worked in law together, from 1938-1958, Mr. Berry instilled in Judge McClain the responsibility to lead and mentor those following in his footsteps.

"He felt the role for black leaders was the struggle for justice and equality," the North Carolina native says.

A defining moment in Judge McClain's career came in a meeting with the late Judge Stanley Struble. "He told me to bring down racial barriers in my profession, the bar," Judge McClain recalls. "I made up my mind to improve the quality of life for black lawyers in Cincinnati."

His distinguished career is marked by many "firsts." He became the first African-American member of the Cincinnati Lawyers Club in 1947 and joined the Cincinnati Bar Association in 1950 as its first black member.

In 1942 he became the first African-American assistant solicitor for Cincinnati. In 1957 he was named deputy city solicitor, and in 1963 he became city solicitor, a post he held until 1972. He was the first African-American to be named city solicitor of a major U.S. city. In joining Keating, Muething & Klekamp in 1972, he became the first African-American to serve in a major law firm in Cincinnati.

He served as Hamilton County Common Pleas Court Judge (1975-76), the first African-American to hold the post; Hamilton County Municipal Court judge (1977-78); and Hamilton County Municipal Court trial referee (1979-1980). He is presently counsel at Manley, Burke & Lipton and law director for Lincoln Heights, Ohio.

Judge McClain has educated and mentored many aspiring attorneys, serving as adjunct professor of law at the University of Cincinnati Law School from 1963-72 and at the Salmon P. Chase Law School from 1965-72.

He has earned numerous prestigious awards, most notably: the Ellis Island Gold Medal of Honor (1997); the Race Relations Award from the Ohio Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Holiday Commission (1997); the National Bar Association Hall of Fame (1986); and a certificate of honor from the Board of Directors of the NAACP for outstanding civic contributions in Cincinnati in the field of race relations (1942).

He is married to Roberta White McClain, a retired supervisor of social services for the Hamilton County Welfare Department.

"I had a good philosophy that I was not going to let external forces define me," Judge McClain said. "Rather, my divine forces inside defined me. That has been my philosophy all my life - that brought me through and gave me survival skills and success skills."