GOVERNOR
BRUCE SUNDLUN PAPERS
1990-1995
MSG#120
BIOGRAPHICAL
NOTE
Governor Bruce Sundlun has
a long and
successful career in business, politics, and the practice of law. A native
Rhode Islander, Sundlun was born in Providence on January 19, 1920. His
father Walter was a lawyer and active in state and local politics. The
family lived on the east side of the city and the young Sundlun attended
local public schools, including Classical High School.
After graduation from high school, Sundlun entered
Williams College in Massachusetts. His college years were interrupted,
however, by the beginning of World War II. Shortly after the Japanese
attack on Pearl Harbor, Sundlun enlisted in the Army Air Corps. Since he
already had a private pilot's license, Sundlun was trained to fly the B-17
bomber. He was assigned to the 384th Bomb Group in England in early 1943
after a year's training in the United States.
On his thirteenth mission, Sundlun's aircraft was shot
down over Belgium. Sundlun bailed out and spent six harrowing months in
occupied Belgium and France before making his way to neutral Switzerland.
After a stint with the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), Sundlun was
returned to his unit and then transferred to the Pacific theater. At war's
end he left the active military service, having been awarded the
Distinguished Flying Cross, the Air Medal with Cluster, and a Purple
Heart.
Sundlun returned to college after the war, receiving a
B.A. from Williams College in 1946 and a law degree from Harvard
University in 1949. Upon graduation from Harvard, Sundlun began a lengthy
business and legal career spanning more than thirty years. His legal
career included stints as an Assistant U.S. Attorney and Special Assistant
to the Attorney General (1949-54), and partnerships in two law firms
(1954-76). In the business world, he served as the President of Executive
Jet Aviation (1970-76) and President, Chairman, and Chief Executive
Officer of Outlet Communications (1976-88). He continues to serve on the
boards of directors of a number of companies from California to Jamaica.
Prior to his involvement in elective politics, Sundlun
served on a number of civic boards and commissions in Rhode Island
including the Capitol Center Commission, the Legislative Pay Commission,
the Providence Review Commission, the Providence Housing Authority, and
the Providence School Board.
In 1986, Sundlun sought and won the Democratic Party
nomination for governor of Rhode Island. He was defeated in the general
election by the incumbent Republican governor, Edward DiPrete. The two met
in a rematch in 1988 with DiPrete winning again, though by a much narrower
margin.
The DiPrete administration was rocked by a series of
scandals between 1988 and 1990 and DiPrete was, as a result, a much
weakened candidate in 1990. Sensing the opportunity to win the governor's
office for the first time in six years, the Democratic Party leadership
endorsed a more "traditional" politician for governor,
Providence Mayor Joseph Paolino. Sundlun and Warwick Mayor Francis
Flaherty challenged Paolino in a primary. Sundlun emerged victorious after
a hard-fought primary campaign and earned the right to meet DiPrete for a
third consecutive time in the general election of 1990.
Sundlun won an overwhelming victory at the
Credit Union and polls in
1990. He was handily re-elected in 1992 after skillfully handling a
potentially disastrous credit union and banking crisis in his first term. After initially
promising not to seek a third term, Sundlun changed his mind and announced
that he would be a candidate for re-election in the spring of 1994. Due to
a change in the Rhode Island constitution, the 1994 election marked the
first time that Rhode Island general officers, including the governor,
would be elected to four year terms. Sundlun was challenged in the
Democratic Party primary by state senator Myrth York. York defeated
Sundlun in the primary and was herself defeated in the general election by
Republican Party candidate Lincoln Almond.
In 1995 Sundlun became the University of Rhode Island's first
Governor-in-Residence. He continues to teach two courses in Political
Science Department and is engaged in fund-raising on behalf of the university. He
also continues to have an active interest in politics as a frequent
contributor to the op-ed page of the Providence Journal and as a
guest political commentator on local television stations.