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    Ex-Boston Mayor White, led in turbulent '70s, dies

    BOSTON (AP) — Kevin H. White, a four-term mayor who led Boston through years of racial violence and economic stagnation and was credited with putting the city on a path to prosperity, has died. He was 82.

    White, who had been diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease in 2003, died Friday night at his Beacon Hill home surrounded by his family, said George Regan, a family spokesman and friend.

    "He was a man who built Boston into the world-class city it is today," said Regan, who called his loss "devastating."

    White, a white Irish Catholic from a family of politicians, is credited with revitalizing Boston's downtown and seeing the city through court-ordered busing, but he ended his tenure in 1983 under a cloud of ethics suspicions.

    The Democrat was elected Massachusetts secretary of state three times before running for mayor for the first time in 1967 against antibusing activist Louise Day Hicks. He defeated her with support from the black community and liberals.

    After losing a 1970 bid for governor, White was re-elected mayor in 1971, again defeating Hicks. He won again narrowly in 1975 and 1979.

    White was considered as a vice presidential running mate to U.S. Sen. George McGovern of South Dakota in 1972 but was passed over for U.S. Sen. Thomas Eagleton of Missouri, who was later cast aside for R. Sargent Shriver Jr.

    After U.S. District Court Judge W. Arthur Garrity ordered busing to desegregate public schools in 1974, White protected schoolchildren from ensuing violence with federal and state assistance during the period of crisis and in 1976 led a march of 30,000 to protest racial violence.

    White was never totally comfortable with busing, however, and called Garrity's plan "too severe."

    "I wish I knew a way to have taught Garrity or convinced Garrity to be more generous ... or softer in his implementation of that order," White said after his time as mayor.

    U.S. Sen. John Kerry of Massachusetts, a fellow Democrat, said White "knew how to wisely wield the power of the mayor's office for the public good."

    "For 16 years," Kerry said in a statement, "the mayor shepherded the city through the turbulence of the late '60s and mid-'70s and in the process ushered in the remarkable city we know today."

    Current Mayor Thomas Menino, also a Democrat, praised White for his contributions to the city.

    "Mayor Kevin White was a great friend and a great leader who left a lasting mark of hope and inspiration on the City of Boston," he said in a statement. "He will be sorely missed."

    White's first two terms were known for his Little City Halls in the city's far-flung neighborhoods that gave power to ethnic and racial minorities, but he consolidated his power in his final two terms.

    White closed the Little City Halls and instead used a network of ward lieutenants who rewarded the mayor's supporters with city jobs and contracts.

    Seven mayoral aides were eventually indicted on fraud and extortion charges. His one-time budget director and an official of the Boston Redevelopment Authority were convicted of fraudulently obtaining city pensions. A deputy commissioner was convicted of tax evasion for failing to report money that prosecutors said he gained from bribes.

    White was never implicated. The State Ethics Commission, however, conducted a 10-month investigation that found "reasonable cause" that White had violated conflict-of-interest laws.

    The city also wallowed in a financial crisis in the later years of his tenure that led to layoffs of police officers and firefighters and the shutdown of some stations.

    The crises were exploited by his critics, who called him King Kevin, and he dropped out of the 1983 mayoral race, eventually won by Raymond Flynn.

    "It's no secret that Kevin and I were rivals for many years," Flynn said in a statement. "But underneath that sometimes heated rivalry, rooted in different priorities, was a mutual respect. Kevin and I shared a deep love for this complex, fascinating city of Boston."

    A liberal reformer, White appealed to a cross-section of society, including the young.

    Once, when the Rolling Stones were arrested on the way to Boston, the mayor released them into his own custody.

    "The Stones have been busted, but I have sprung them!" he told an audience at Boston Garden.

    While the busing crisis stained Boston's image, White was also credited with revitalizing the city's downtown, especially the shops and restaurants of Quincy Market, which remains one of the city's top tourist attractions. He thought the downtown renaissance would make Boston a "world-class city."

    A statue of White was unveiled near Quincy Market in 2006.

    Gov. Deval Patrick, a Democrat, said White's stewardship created "a path to prosperity for the city."

    White's father and maternal grandfather had been Boston City Council presidents. In 1956, he married Kathryn Galvin, the daughter of another City Council president. He was educated at Tabor Academy, Williams College, Boston College Law School and the Harvard Graduate School of Public Administration.

    After handing over the office to Flynn in 1984, White accepted a position at Boston University as a professor of communications and public management.

    While mayor in 1970, White had major surgery to remove two-thirds of his stomach. He suffered a heart attack in 2001 while at a Florida restaurant and spent several days in a hospital when he had a pacemaker implanted.

    He is survived by his wife of 55 years, Kathyrn Galvin White, five children and several grandchildren.

    ___

    Associated Press Writer Sylvia Wingfield contributed to this report.

     

    47 comments

    • FredJ  •  Pinellas Park, Florida  •  28 days ago
      Anyone who was there in the days of kevin white, bobby orr, red sox yaz will tell you"that was the most exciting of times" Things were not always right, but they were never boring!
    • Sickov Idiotz  •  27 days ago
      Boston is a beautiful city. Home to some of the greatest institutions of higher learning in existence. And, yet, the people who live there seem to be, by many accounts, the biggest group of retards on the planet. What gives?
    • MM  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  27 days ago
      Just curious...how did that bussing thing work out?
    • uub  •  White Plains, New York  •  27 days ago
      The coloreds were out of control and he refrained from killing them all. In the long run, would have been better to open fire on them all and cut down on their population.
    • Eye Nose What Eye Nose  •  27 days ago
      Say it ain't so! Boston had racial problems? I thought that was limited to the South.
    • GS430  •  27 days ago
      I have had a front-row seat for the last 53 years to the circus that is Boston politics. We've spawned some awful characters in this city (and state). Kevin White was dealt a tough hand -- try to continue with the racist policies that Boston "liberals" practiced (ever wonder why there were no "For Sale" signs on homes? So blacks could not buy them...), and try to make peace with other racist groups like the NAACP.

      In the end, he probably did about as good a job as any of us could have. Boston, the home of dysfunctional politics!
    • STAY AWAY FROM ZOOTS THEY ...  •  27 days ago
      I was wondering why the flags were at half mast yesterday in MA
    • Ann  •  Richmond, Virginia  •  27 days ago
      "He was a man who built Boston into the world class city it is today"? That has got to be one of the most arrogant statements I have read in a long time. I grew up in the Boston area and don't doubt that he was a decent man but what that statement is ridiculous.
    • Geo  •  Boston, Massachusetts  •  27 days ago
      I actually went to high school in the late 70s in Boston and believe me it was tough, at the end of the day you had a couple of Bostons finest monitoring the school and the buses just in case the blacks,Ricans and whites would go at it. Now its blacks vs blacks for some reason.
    • Nancy  •  28 days ago
      The days of rage in the 60s and 70s i do remember them well,i lived in Chicago at that time.
      And we had our own host of problems with everything form a blizzard in 67 to a crooked mayor, to the 68 riots, the Richard Speck murders, the Dec 69 police raid gone wrong on Black Panther HQ,the Chicago 7 trial.
      And the list goes on and on.
    • Petra  •  Minot, North Dakota  •  28 days ago
      Too bad he'll miss the Patriots get redemption at the superbowl! Go Pats
    • stfu!  •  27 days ago
      From a family of politicians? Then he was a turd.
    • C Lloyd  •  Charlottesville, Virginia  •  27 days ago
      The media has to include drama, controversy and intrigue in order to print an article. And we rely on them for information on our public servants and wannabes.
    • p!ssirk  •  27 days ago
      Where's the #$%$ desk, Kevin?
    • Pan_Euro_ Victory  •  27 days ago
      So Mayor White stole from the Whites to give the violent, parasitic and rapidly multiplying black and brown underclass their "Gibs Me Dats"?

      In 20-30 years when Boston starts to resemble Detroit, will he still be remembered as a saint?
    • Edward  •  28 days ago
      One fewer pension to pay off.
    • thebo  •  Intercourse, Pennsylvania  •  27 days ago
      In other sad news, Cher is still alive
    • joseph  •  Somerset, Massachusetts  •  27 days ago
      What the heck took so long, what a #$%$ bag....
    • STAY AWAY FROM ZOOTS THEY ...  •  27 days ago
      Amazing that the 19 comments that precede me are negative and not from the area I am sure or know him. I met him several times. He was a class act. So is Menino- Now if we can lose Deval Patrick...............
    • Capt. Presly O'Bannon  •  Jacksonville, North Carolina  •  27 days ago
      White was an old time "Tammany Hall" type corrupt politician and on top of that a liberal moonbat to boot. Wouldn't shed too many tears unless you were related to the man.
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