James T. McDermott (judge)

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McDermott in 1979

James T. McDermott (September 22, 1926 – June 21, 1992) was a Pennsylvania judge and politician who served on the state's Supreme Court from 1981 until his death in 1992. Before joining the court, he was active in Philadelphia politics as a Republican candidate for Congress in 1958, city council in 1962, and mayor in 1963. He was a trial court judge on the Court of Common Pleas from 1965 to 1981.

James Thomas McDermott Sr. was born in Philadelphia in 1926, the son of Harry Aloysius McDermott and his wife Helen Genoe McDermott.[1][2] His maternal grandfather, James Genoe, was a Philadelphia Police captain, a fact later said to have contributed to McDermott's law-and-order approach on the bench.[3] His mother, Helen, was a vaudevillian singer and actress before her marriage and entertained the troops in World War I.[4] His father, a clerk and bartender, died in 1954.[2][5]

McDermott earned a bachelor's degree from Saint Joseph's University and a J.D. from Temple University Law School.[6] He was admitted to the bar in 1951 and practiced in the field of labor law at the firm he co-founded, McDermott, Quinn & Higgins.[7] He also taught classes on legal evidence at St. Joseph's and on commercial law at the American Institute of Banking.[7] In 1954, he married Mary Theresa Bradley; they remained married until her death in 1974 and had six children—five sons and one daughter.[8][9]

Political career

McDermott entered the political arena in 1958 when he ran for the Republican nomination for the federal House of Representatives from Pennsylvania's 3rd district. He won the primary easily over William M. Phillips, a former city councilman, taking 85% of the vote.[10] In the general election that November, however, McDermott lost to the incumbent Democrat, James A. Byrne, by a 63.5% to 36.5% margin.[11]

In 1962, McDermott ran for city council at-large. The race was a special election, called when councilman Victor E. Moore resigned his seat to become head of the Philadelphia Gas Works in September 1962. Because of the short time between the vacancy and the election, ward leaders picked McDermott instead of holding a primary.[12] That November, McDermott lost the election to the executive director of the Philadelphia Parking Authority, Walter S. Pytko.[13]

1963 Philadelphia mayor election by ward (Tate in blue, McDermott in red)

McDermott was the city Republican organization's choice for mayor in 1963, and he easily defeated three independent candidates in the May primary.[14] The Democrats nominated acting mayor James Tate for a full term, and a close race was expected.[15] McDermott campaigned on a reform platform, saying that Tate had worked to sabotage the good-government reforms of the Joseph S. Clark Jr. and Richardson Dilworth administrations that had run the city from 1951 to 1962.[16] Tate responded by contrasting his experience with McDermott's and touted his endorsement by the AFL–CIO.[16] McDermott said that Tate "has never been off the public payroll in twenty-five years" and criticized the mayor's refusal to debate him.[16] The election was closer than the one four years earlier, but McDermott still lost by more than 66,000 votes.[17][18]

Judicial career

References

Sources

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