Eugene Hultman

{{short description|American politician}}

{{Infobox officeholder

|image = 1908 Eugene Hultman Massachusetts House of Representatives (1).png

|imagesize =

|caption= Hultman circa 1908

| name = Eugene Hultman

| birth_date = July 13, 1875

| birth_place = Boston

| death_date = April 22, 1945 (aged 69)

| death_place = Duxbury, Massachusetts

|restingplace =

| nationality = American

| website =

| occupation =

| residence =

| party = Republican

| spouse =

| alma_mater = Massachusetts Institute of Technology

| title = Commissioner of the Boston Police Department

| term_start = 1930

| term_end = 1934

| predecessor = Herbert A. Wilson

| successor = Joseph J. Leonard

| title2 = Commissioner of the Boston Fire Department

| term_start2 = 1926

| term_end2 = 1930

| predecessor2 = Theodore A. Glynn

| successor2 = Edward F. McLaughlin

}}

Eugene C. Hultman (July 13, 1875 – April 22, 1945) was an American political figure who held numerous positions in state and local government in Massachusetts, including Chairman of the Metropolitan District Commission, Commissioner of the Boston Police, Fire, and Building Departments, and member of the Massachusetts General Court.

Early life

Hultman was born on July 13, 1875, in Boston. His father was a sea captain from Sweden. Hultman attended public schools in Boston and Quincy, Massachusetts, and graduated from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1896. He worked as a consulting engineer and auditor.{{cite news|title=Eugene C. Hultman Dies Suddenly at 69; Funeral Tomorrow|newspaper=The Boston Daily Globe|date=April 23, 1945}}{{cite book|title=A Souvenir of Massachusetts Legislators|url=https://archive.org/stream/souvenirofmassac1909brid/souvenirofmassac1909brid_djvu.txt|accessdate=March 24, 2018}}

Political career

Hultman was elected to the Quincy city council in 1899. From 1906 to 1908 he represented the 5th Norfolk district in the Massachusetts House of Representatives. In 1909 he represented the First Norfolk District in the Massachusetts Senate. In 1920 he was appointed state Fuel Administrator and chairman of the Commission on the Necessaries of Life by Governor Calvin Coolidge. In 1926 he was appointed Fire Commissioner of Boston by Mayor Malcolm E. Nichols.{{cite news|title=Hultman Named for Fire Berth|newspaper=The Boston Daily Globe|date=June 16, 1926}} In January 1930, Nichols' successor James Michael Curley moved Hultman to the position of Building Commissioner.{{cite news|title=Hultman Shifted to Building Post|newspaper=The Boston Daily Globe|date=January 9, 1930}} Four months later, Hultman was appointed commissioner of the Boston Police Department by Governor Frank G. Allen.{{cite news|title=Hultman in New Post|newspaper=The Boston Daily Globe|date=May 8, 1930}} During his tenure as police commissioner, Hultman fought against the city's racketeers and gangsters and opposed civil service examinations for captains, desiring to appoint them himself. He resigned on December 28, 1934, to accept the appointment of chairman of the Metropolitan District Commission. He was reappointed by Governor Leverett Saltonstall in 1940. In February 1945, Saltonstall's successor, Maurice J. Tobin, attempted to replace Hultman with William Arthur Reilly, however the Massachusetts Governor's Council blocked Reilly's appointment. Hultman died of a heart attack on April 22, 1945, at his summer home in Duxbury, Massachusetts.

References