Lou D'Allesandro explained

Lou D'Allesandro
State Senate:New Hampshire
State:New Hampshire
District:20th
Term Start:December 2, 1998
Predecessor:Richard Danais
State House1:New Hampshire
State1:New Hampshire
Alongside1:Irene M. Messier, Frank J. Reidy
Term Start1:December 4, 1996
Term End1:December 2, 1998
Predecessor1:John M. White
Successor1:John M. White
Office2:Member of the
New Hampshire Executive Council
from the 4th district
Term Start2:1975
Term End2:1981
Predecessor2:John F. Bridges
Successor2:Louis J. Georgopoulos
State House3:New Hampshire
State3:New Hampshire
Alongside3:James A. Sweeney, Doris T. Lynch, Robert H. Gillmore
Term Start3:1972
Term End3:1974
Predecessor3:Multi-member district
Successor3:Gerard H. Belanger
Birth Date:30 July 1938
Birth Place:Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.
Spouse:Patricia
Profession:Retired college administrator and basketball coach
Party:Democratic
Alma Mater:University of New Hampshire

Lou D'Allesandro (born July 30, 1938) is a Democratic member of the New Hampshire Senate, representing the 20th district since 1998. D'Allesandro has served as chair of Senate Finance and vice chair of the Ways & Means and Capital Budget committees. Previously he was a member of the New Hampshire Executive Council from 1975 to 1981[1] and the New Hampshire House of Representatives from 1996 through 1998 and from 1972 to 1974.[2] D'Allesandro appears frequently on the Paul Westcott Show on WGIR (AM) and WQSO.

A 1956 graduate of Worcester Academy and of the University of New Hampshire (UNH) in 1961, D'Alessandro was a three-year letterman on the football team, and served as the team's co-captain during his senior season in 1960–61. He was also a two-year member of the lacrosse team and played one year of baseball for the Wildcats. While at UNH, he was a member of the Phi Kappa Theta fraternity. He was inducted into the UNH Hall of Fame on September 25, 2010.[3]

In 1963, D'Allesandro became the first athletic director and men's basketball coach at Southern New Hampshire University (known then as New Hampshire College), where he was instrumental in helping the school achieve NCAA status. As head coach, the men's basketball team won three consecutive conference titles from 1964–65 to 1966–67. He was inducted into the SNHU Penmen Hall of Fame in 1970.[4]

A biography of D'Allesandro, Lou D'Allesandro: Lion of the New Hampshire Senate and Thoughts for Presidential Hopefuls, by Mark C. Bodanza, was published in 2018.[5]

Early life

D'Allessandro was born and raised in East Boston. At three years old, a house fire occurred in his family's tenement, and he was saved by the Boston Fire Department.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Former Councilors . State of New Hampshire Executive Council . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100329221415/http://www.nh.gov/council/former_councilors.html . 2010-03-29 .
  2. Web site: The New Hampshire State Senate.
  3. Web site: Staff Writer . University of N.H. to honor state Sen. D'Allesandro . 2023-10-31 . Portsmouth Herald . en-US.
  4. Web site: Lou D'Allesandro. June 30, 2017. SNHU Penmen.
  5. Book: Lou D'Allesandro: Lion of the New Hampshire Senate and Thoughts for Presidential Hopefuls. Mark C. Bodanza. North Hill Press . April 1, 2018. 978-0997014426.