William L. Clay Sr.’s legacy honored by St. Louis University

William L. Clay Sr.’s legacy honored by St. Louis University
0Comments

The first African-American to represent Missouri in Congress, Congressman William L. Clay Sr., has passed away at the age of 94. He served 32 years in the U.S. House of Representatives and was a founding member of the Congressional Black Caucus.

“We are deeply saddened by the passing of Congressman Clay, a towering figure in the fight for civil rights and social justice — both nationally and here in St. Louis,” said Rochelle D. Smith, SLU’s vice president for diversity and innovative community engagement. “We are sending our prayers and deepest sympathies to the entire Clay family.”

Born on April 30, 1931, in St. Louis, Congressman Clay grew up as one of nine children in a North St. Louis tenement apartment without indoor plumbing or hot water. He began working at age 13 as a janitor and later as a tailor.

After excelling academically, he graduated from Saint Louis University with a bachelor’s degree in history and political science in 1953. Following his graduation, he was drafted into the U.S. Army where he organized a boycott protesting discriminatory practices.

In 1959, he won his first elected office as alderman of St. Louis’s 26th Ward after an unexpected victory. His advocacy continued with protests against discriminatory practices at local establishments leading to over 100 days of jail time for his role in such demonstrations.

Elected to Congress in 1968, Clay became known for representing underrepresented communities stating, “I represent those who are in need of representation.” During his tenure, he sponsored over 100 bills that became law including significant contributions like securing the Family and Medical Leave Act.

His career was marked by principled independence; when retiring in 2001 as one of the most senior members of Congress, his son William Lacy Clay Jr., succeeded him.

In education advocacy, Congressman Clay established scholarships supporting high school seniors from Missouri’s 1st Congressional District transitioning recently into an institute within SLU focusing on civic engagement.

“Through the generous support of Congressman Clay and his family, his lifelong commitment to equity, dignity and service will continue to shape our mission,” Smith stated further honoring him posthumously with accolades like SLU’s Pioneer Award recognizing leadership paving ways for others.

Congressman Clay is survived by his son William Lacy Clay Jr., two daughters Vicki and Michelle; five grandchildren; two great-grandchildren following preceding death earlier this year by wife Carol Johnson Clay whom he married over seven decades ago.



Related

Busch Stadium

Cardinals consider rotation changes as Hunter Dobbins nears return from injury

The St. Louis Cardinals are weighing changes to their pitching rotation as Hunter Dobbins nears his return from injury rehabilitation. With several key players traded away this offseason and limited pitching depth available at Triple-A Memphis due to injuries elsewhere on staff, team officials must decide how best to integrate Dobbins into their plans.

Busch Stadium

NL Central is only MLB division with all teams above .500 in 2026

All five National League Central teams currently have winning records—a rare feat in baseball history. No MLB division has ever finished a season with each member over .500.

Children's Mercy Park

Sporting Kansas City releases weekly schedule and community initiatives for April 20-26

Sporting Kansas City has outlined its busy schedule from April 20-26 including matches against Chicago Fire and Houston Dynamo 2. The club is also hosting youth camps, volunteer activities supporting food security efforts, ticket giveaways for summer fan events, academy tournaments, early childhood programs starting Saturday morning in Shawnee.

Trending

The Weekly Newsletter

Sign-up for the Weekly Newsletter from Show-Me State Times.