- Edward J. King
Infobox Governor
name=Edward Joseph King
imagesize=150px
caption=
order=66th
office= Governor of Massachusetts
term_start=January 4 ,1979
term_end=January 6 ,1983
lieutenant=Thomas P. O'Neill III
predecessor=Michael S. Dukakis
successor=Michael S. Dukakis
birth_date= birth date|1925|5|11|mf=y
birth_place=Chelsea, Massachusetts
death_date= death date and age | 2006|09|18|1925|05|11
death_place=Burlington, Massachusetts
spouse= Josephine King
religion=Roman Catholic
party= Democrat (Switched to Republican after leaving office)
footnotes=Edward Joseph King (
May 11 1925 –September 18 2006 ) was the Governor of theU.S. state ofMassachusetts from 1979 to 1983.Born in
Chelsea, Massachusetts , and a graduate ofBoston College andBentley College , King played professional football as a guard with theAll-America Football Conference Buffalo Bills from 1948 to 1949 and theNational Football League 's Baltimore Colts in 1950. Prior to winning election as Governor, his only elected office, he served as the Executive Director of theMassachusetts Port Authority and President of the New England Business Council.In 1978, King defeated incumbent Governor
Michael Dukakis in the Democratic primary, and served as Governor of Massachusetts from 1979 to 1983. He was defeated for re-election in a 1982 rematch with Dukakis.During his term of office, Governor King froze
property tax es, reduced state spending on social programs, undertook a variety of efforts to encourage increased business and agricultural opportunities in the Commonwealth, and took a tough stand oncrime by introducing mandatory minimum sentences and passing legislation to reintroduce thedeath penalty in Massachusetts, a measure which was later ruled unconstitutional by the state's Supreme Judicial Court. Advocating capital punishment, PresidentRonald Reagan called King his "favorite Democratic governor" and King endorsed Reagan in the 1984 Presidential election.Following his term of office, Governor King joined the public relations firm of Hill & Knowlton. In 1985 King switched his party affiliation to the Republican Party and briefly considered running for governor in 1986 on the Republican Party ticket. Until the time of his death, he maintained residences in both Massachusetts and
Florida .His wife Josephine died in 1995. He was survived by two sons, Timothy and Brian; two sisters, Helen Kennedy and Mary King; and five grandchildren. His late brother, Paul, was a judge in the state court system.
External links
* [http://www.mass.gov/statehouse/massgovs/eking.htm Official Commonwealth of Massachusetts Governor Biography]
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