Jesse J. McCrary, Jr.

Jesse J. McCrary, Jr.
Florida Secretary of State
In office
1978–1979
Personal details
Born September 16, 1937
Blitchton, Marion County, Florida
Died October 29, 2007 (aged 70)
Miami, Florida
Profession Attorney

Jesse James McCrary, Jr. (September 16, 1937 – October 29, 2007) was an American lawyer from the U.S. state of Florida. A civil rights activist, he entered state politics and served as Secretary of State of Florida, becoming the first black member of the Florida Cabinet since the end of Reconstruction.

Early life and education

McCrary was born in 1937 in Blitchton, Marion County, Florida, the son of a Baptist preacher. He attended Howard Academy in Ocala. There he was very active in sports, playing several sports. He was the quarterback of the school's championship football team. He was a political science major at Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University, where he was a civil rights activist, organizing sit-ins in Tallahassee. He was also on the debate team, a member of the drama club and an ROTC cadet. He did a stint in Army Intelligence before graduating from FAMU Law with his Juris Doctor in 1965.

Career

In 1967, McCrary became Florida's first assistant Attorney General. He dealt with criminal appeals and advised the state Racing Commission. Three years later, he became the first black lawyer to argue a case before the Supreme Court of the United States on behalf of a Southern state (the case was Williams v. State of Florida; the court decided in favor of the state, which was seeking to uphold a law allowing six-person juries in non-capital criminal cases).

In the 1970s, McCrary was a partner in the law firm of McCrary, Ferguson and Leethrough. He issued a report critical of Opa-locka's government and police department, was the Dade County School Board's first black attorney, and was appointed by the governor as a judge on the Florida Industrial Commission. At the time, he was Florida's highest-paid black official.

McCrary was appointed Secretary of State of Florida by Governor Reubin Askew in 1978 to finish the unexpired term of his predecessor, who had resigned to run for governor. As Secretary of State, he recommended judicial appointees to the governor. (Askew had also appointed Florida's first black Circuit Court judges.[1]

McCrary returned to private practice in 1979 and was active in the community in the 1980s and 1990s. He represented an embattled county commissioner in a public corruption scandal. He was part of the effort to have the board allow single-member districts. In 1991, he served as the unpaid chair of a local community services organization which he saved form bankruptcy. In 2000, he was appointed to the Board of Miami Children's Hospital.[2] In 2001, he was named to a commission that made recommendations to Senior Judge Lenore C. Nesbitt in a federal condemnation suit brought by the National Park Service to acquire land for Everglades National Park. [3] In 2003, the Florida Legislature passed a resolution recognizing his work on ten landmark Florida Supreme Court cases.

He died of lung cancer.

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