Born on 1912 in Conneaut, Ohio in the county of Ashtabula, Merle M. McCurdy graduated from Conneaut High School and later from (Case) Western Reserve University in 1947 with a law degree.

Legal Career

Following law school, Merle worked for five years as a partner for Norman Shelby Minor, a famous Cleveland criminal defense lawyer who trained, in addition to Merle, Representative Louis Stokes and Carl Stokes – the first African American elected as mayor of major city in the United States.

Merle was second to no one. He served as an Assistant Prosecuting Attorney for the Cuyahoga County Prosecutor’s office and later was named as the county’s initial Public Defender and the first African American to work at the Legal Aid Society of Cleveland. In 1961, he was the first African American appointed as United States Attorney for the Northern District of Ohio by President John F. Kennedy, only the second African American to hold this position in the United States.

In 1967, following the Hough riots in Cleveland, Merle took a leave of absence as U.S. Attorney to serve as General Counsel to the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders (the “Kerner Commission”), an investigation into the causes of the racial violence that was prevalent in the U.S. during the 1960's. In March of 1968, Merle was appointed by President Lyndon B. Johnson as the Country’s first Consumer Counsel. Unfortunately, Merle passed away unexpectedly before serving in this new capacity.

Lasting Impact

One of Merle's friends, George M. Steinbrenner, future owner of the New York Yankees and then President of the American Ship Building Co., stated the following in announcing the naming of a ship for his fallen friend, the "Merle M. McCurdy", the first ship on the Great Lakes Fleet to be named for an African American:

“We feel this is a most appropriate gesture, and one of which the entire Great Lakes industry should be proud… This ship should serve to remind many people, that this ideal which McCurdy exemplified is in fact a real one and that … it is our duty to see that such opportunities are always available regardless of race, creed, or color.”

His Roots

The story begins with Nasa McCurdy, Merle’s great-great grandfather and a former slave, who was manumitted by Rachel Kennedy in Greene County, Pennsylvania during the 1790s. During the 1840s Nasa McCurdy, Jr., his son, acquired property near Zanesville, Ohio. A known conductor on the Underground Railroad, he made several trips to Amhertsburg, Ontario, an area he would eventually settle in to permanently. In this small town just across the river into Canada from Detroit, MI Nasa helped establish the Nazrey African Methodist Episcopal Church, an ending point on the Underground Railroad. Nasa, Jr's son, George Douglass McCurdy, named after family friend and abolitionist Frederick Douglass, and his son Roy (Merle's father) would leave Canada and start a new life Conneaut, Ohio in the beginning of the 20th century.

A Dedication

This site is dedicated to Howard Douglas McCurdy (1932-2018) grandson to George Douglass McCurdy. A Canadian civil rights activist and elected Member of Parliament, Howard held a number “firsts” in Canada, similar to Merle his American cousin. He was the first African Canadian to earn tenure a Canadian university (Assumption College known later as University of Windsor) and he founded the NAACP chapter at Michigan State University and served for a time as its President.

Source: Adaptation of the May 2, 2014 speech, The McCurdy Legacy: Second to No One, written and presented by Richard Dana for the Ashtabula County Bar Association’s Law Day event honoring Merle McCurdy.

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