Bulger, William M., 1934-
Variant namesWilliam M. Bulger was born on February 2, 1934 in Dorchester, Massachusetts the son of James Joseph Bulger Sr. and Jane Veronica "Jean" McCarthy. Bulger was the third of six children and grew up in South Boston's Old Harbor Village Housing Development (known as the Mary Ellen McCormick Housing Development). His older brother was James Bulger Jr., later known as "Whitey". He attended Boston College High School graduating in 1952, graduated from Boston College with an English degree in 1955 with assistance from the G.I. Bill, and earned a J.D. from Boston College Law School in 1961 earning him the title of "Triple Eagle." Bulger married Mary Foley in 1960 and they had nine children: William, James, Sarah, Patrick, Mary, Daniel, Kathleen, Christopher, and Brendan.
Bulger was first elected to the Massachusetts House of Representatives as a Democrat in 1960. Then he was elected to the Massachusetts State Senate in 1970 where eventually he became State Senate president in 1978 until 1996, the longest tenure in Massachusetts history. He opposed court-ordered desegregated busing, led efforts to write the first child abuse reporting laws, advocated for charter schools and public school choice, and advocated for funding for public libraries and other social assistance programs. In the 1990s he worked on welfare reform legislation. Bulger published a political memoir, While the Music Lasts: My Life in Politics in 1996.
In 1996 Bulger was appointed as president of the University of Massachusetts where he increased private support, alumni activity, research funding, and academic scores of freshman. He also launched an award-winning television advertising campaign featuring prominent alumni and a scholarship program.
Bulger's brother "Whitey" was a notorious criminal and murderer who was a fugitive from 1995 until 2011. Questions about Bulger's knowledge of Whitey's location as a fugitive were raised eventually resulting in a 2003 congressional investigation in which Bulger testified in exchange for immunity from prosecution for obstructing justice. This eventually led to Bulger's resignation as president of the University of Massachusetts in September of 2003.
Bulger is a past president of the Boston Public Library, Overseer Emeritus of the Boston Symphony Orchestra and a former member of the Massachusetts General Hospital Board of Trustees, Museum of Fine Arts Board of Trustees, and McLean Hospital Board of Trustees. He joined the faculties of Boston College and Suffolk University as a lecturer of political science in 2004. Bulger lives in South Boston, Massachusetts.
Role | Title | Holding Repository | |
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Massachusetts. Committee on International Trade and Foreign Investment. Photographs of the mayor of Beijing, 1984. | Commonwealth of Massachusetts State Archives | ||
creatorOf | William M. Bulger Papers | Boston College. John J. Burns Library | |
referencedIn | Massachusetts. Committee on International Trade and Foreign Investment. Photographs of the mayor of Beijing, 1984. | Commonwealth of Massachusetts State Archives |
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associatedWith | Massachusetts. Committee on International Trade and Foreign Investment. | corporateBody |
memberOf | Massachusetts House of Representatives | corporateBody |
memberOf | Massachusetts State Senate | corporateBody |
employeeOf | University of Massachusetts | corporateBody |
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Dorchester | MA | US |
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Education |
Boston (Mass.) |
Legislation |
Massachusetts |
Politics and culture |
University presidents |
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Lawyer |
Politicians |
President, Educational Institution |
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Person
Birth 1934-02-02
Male
Americans
English