William N. McNair
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- This article is about the mayor of Pittsburgh, for other people named William N. McNair see William McNair (disambiguation).
William N. McNair (November 7, 1880–September 13, 1948), served as Mayor of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania from 1934 to 1936.
[edit] Early life
Originally from Middletown, Pennsylvania, McNair moved to Pittsburgh early in his life and became an attorney. He tried his hand at politics several times, losing successive elections before finally winning office.
[edit] Pittsburgh politics
At the city's highest office in 1934, it was soon apparent though why McNair had never won a public office before. McNair almost from the beginning began a confrontational relationship with City Council. At first much of his antics were viewed as the actions of a man that cared about the "little guy"; soon though much of his actions just ground the city's ability to govern to a halt in heated, endless and dramatic debate over the most nuanced issues. During his fractious leadership McNair even set up his office in the ornate lobby of the City County Building to display his "independence" from council and the city bureaucracy.
The most fateful event for his political career took the city by force on St. Patrick's day 1936 when it suffered from the worst flooding in its history. The event and the choatic nature that McNair had plunged the city into sealed his fate. He resigned on a whim in October of 1936 and promptly rescinded his resignation and demanded to once again be sworn in as mayor, but by that time council and the rest of the city had grown tired of his controversial leadership, choosing instead to validate his earlier resignation and let Cornelius Scully to assume the mayor's office.
- See also: List of Mayors of Pittsburgh
[edit] Later life
McNair became a sort of political sideshow after he left office, continuing to run for offices unsuccessfully and giving political speeches and rallies for various causes. He died in St. Louis, Missouri in 1948 during a political rally and is buried in Allegheny Cemetery in Pittsburgh.
Preceded by: John S. Herron |
Mayor of Pittsburgh 1934–1936 |
Succeeded by: Cornelius D. Scully |