Bullard died in Burlington and was buried at Riverbank Cemetery, Stowe, Vermont.
Early life
Vernon Alvord Bullard was born in Hyde Park, Vermont on October 14, 1858, the eldest son of Edwin and Olive (Harrington) Bullard.[1] He was educated in Hyde Park, and began to teach school in 1878.[1] While teaching, Bullard attended the Vermont Normal School, from which he graduated in 1880.[1]
After practicing in Underhill for ten years, Bullard relocated to Burlington, where he continued to practice.[2] Bullard successfully handled several prominent criminal trials and earned a reputation as a skilled lawyer in civil cases, winning several judgments for medical malpractice.[2]
For several years, Bullard was chairman of the Chittenden County Democratic Committee, and he served as a delegate to numerous state party conventions.[2] He was also an unsuccessful candidate for Member of Congress from Vermont's 1st District (1894)[3] and Chittenden County State's Attorney.[4]
Bullard represented Burlington in the Vermont House from 1904 to 1905, and was credited with securing the appropriation that made possible the construction of Morrill Hall at the University of Vermont.[4] He was a delegate to the 1904 Democratic National Convention,[4] and in 1906 he was the unsuccessful Democratic nominee for Vermont Attorney General.[5] Bullard served as Burlington's city attorney for several years,[6] and from 1905 to 1913 he was a member of the city school board, including serving as chairman from 1909 to 1913.[4] In 1908, he was the Democratic nominee for United States Senator against incumbent Republican William P. Dillingham, and the Vermont General Assembly chose Dillingham by a vote of 230 to 38.[7]
Bullard died in Burlington on September 8, 1928.[4] He was buried in plot 5G-31 at Riverbank Cemetery in Stowe, Vermont.[9]
Family
In 1885, Bullard married Fluella R. Stowe (1858–1894) of Morrisville.[2] She died in 1894, and they were the parents of two children, son Haven Stowe and daughter Augusta Ruth, the wife of Earle Benjamin of Plymouth, New Hampshire.[2][4] His second wife was Anniebel Stowe (1865–1925), a sister of his first wife.[2][4]