Childhood Haine was born on August 8, 1944, in Alton, Illinois, to Mary Alice Moran and James Delos Hoare. James Hoare converted to Catholicism when he married the Irish-Catholic Mary Alice. In 1959 the family name was changed to "Haine". Prior to the change, the four Hoare sons – Jim, John, Bill and Tom – often came to blows with other boys over their phonetically unfortunate surname. William Haine was first encouraged to take up a career in politics and "make history" by Sister Geraldine, an Ursuline nun at St. Patrick's Grade School in Alton. After graduating from Marquette Catholic High School in 1963, he earned his B.A. from St. Louis University in History in 1967. In both high school and college, he became involved in local and state politics, including the races of Alton Mayor Clyde H. Wiseman, State Senator
Paul Simon and U.S. Senator
Paul H. Douglas.
Military service and law school After college, Haine enlisted in the U.S. Army to serve in Vietnam. He was awarded the
Bronze Star for Meritorious Service in Combat Operations after his tour as an enlisted army soldier in the First Cavalry Division (Air Mobile) from 1968 to 1969. He was still politically active while overseas, and from Vietnam he filed as a candidate for Alderman of the City of Alton, losing by only a narrow vote despite being unable to campaign. After his tour overseas, Haine attended St. Louis University Law School, where he served with distinction on the Board of Editors of the St. Louis Law Review and earned his J.D. in 1974. Two professors who mentored him there, Rev. Joseph Aloysius McCallin, S.J., and Dr. George D. Wendell, also encouraged him to pursue a career in politics.
Catholic faith During his law school years, Haine met Anna Schickel, an undergraduate French major at St. Louis University; they were married on August 7, 1971, in the Grailville Oratory in
Loveland, Ohio. Haine and his wife have seven children and 33 grandchildren. They continued to reside in Alton, around the corner from his boyhood home (designed by her father, the artist
William Schickel). Haine referred to his wedding as the defining moment of his Catholic faith. ==County service==