Albert Leo "Dapper" O'Neil (April 12, 1920 – December 19, 2007) was an American politician who served as a socially conservative member of the Boston City Council for twenty-eight years.[1] Prior to joining the council, he served on the Boston Licensing Board and was an operative for the Mayor of BostonJames Michael Curley.[1]
In a 1978 interview, O'Neil explained that he got his nickname because his mother was very meticulous about how her children dressed, and where he grew up (the Roxbury neighborhood of Boston) "everybody had a nickname."[4]
In January 1971, O'Neil was appointed to the Boston City Council after the resignation of Louise Day Hicks, who had been elected to the United States House of Representatives.[11] He was subsequently re-elected fourteen times, each term lasting two years.
In November 1999, O'Neil finished fifth (behind Francis Roache, Stephen J. Murphy, Peggy Davis-Mullen, Michael F. Flaherty) in an at-large race in which the top four make the council. In a story published in The Boston Globe after O'Neil's loss, Boston historian Thomas H. O'Connor wrote, "This is the last hurrah not merely for a man but for the politicking he represents." O'Connor went on to say that O'Neil's career endured "largely through the kinds of loyalties he built up over thirty years, from people for whom he'd done favors, and they'd never forget him, and they'd talk about him to their relatives. He built a political career on a system of local patronage."
Political views
O'Neil was a longtime supporter of the right to bear arms; he was known to carry a .38handgun, which he drew at least twice to capture criminals, and he stated in a 1976 council meeting, "I'm an excellent shot. I'll protect people against anyone who comes through that door."[12]
In 1995, Boston newspapers reported that harassment complaints had been filed against O'Neil by a female city worker and a female college student; O'Neil later counter-sued the complainants, claiming that he had been slandered.[15][16]
O'Neil never married; he had a girlfriend, Helen T. Skrzowski, for 56 years.[20] After treatment for prostate cancer in 1992 and 1993, O'Neil had cancer surgery in January 1998.[21] As of 1997, he was legally blind.[22] O'Neil died in West Roxbury on December 19, 2007—his funeral was held at St. Theresa of Avila Church in West Roxbury.[1] He is buried in the Massachusetts National Cemetery in Bourne.[20]
^Dapper O'Neil, Gary Griffith (September 7, 1978). Dapper O'Neil interview. Boston: Boston TV News Digital Library. Event occurs at 17:50. Retrieved October 2, 2017.