Howard was a delegate to the Massachusetts Constitutional Convention of 1917, but resigned to enter the Army.[1] From 1923 to 1927, Howard represented the 7th Middlesex district in the Massachusetts Senate.[7] He was a member of the rules, judiciary, state administration, mercantile affairs, and special joint coal investigating committees.[1] In 1925, Howard was elected Reading's town moderator, a position he would hold for over three decades (with the exception of 1943–1946 when he was unavailable due to military service).[8] He also served on the town's board of selectmen and board of overseers of the poor and was town counsel.[1]
In 1925, Governor Alvan T. Fuller named Howard chairman of the state commission of Administration and Finance.[1] He also served as state budget commissioner until 1928, when, due to the commission's increased workload, Fuller chose to separate the two positions.[9] Howard ran the state's administrative machine under five governors and was described by The Boston Globe as the "state's no man" because he rejected $750 million in expenditures during his 12 years in office. In 1937, Governor Charles F. Hurley chose not to reappoint Howard, ending his tenure on the commission.[10]
Howard retired from government service in 1958.[3] For a time he resided in Brussels, where his wife was a U.S. representative to Expo 58. On August 2, 1958, Howard was a passenger on a Sabena flight from Athens to Brussels that was forced by fighter jets to land in Czechoslovakia. All aboard the plane were unharmed and the flight was allowed to resume after a four-hour detention.[3] Howard died on July 2, 1966, at his summer home in Marblehead, Massachusetts.[13]
References
^ abcdef"Sen. Howard to Succeed White". The Boston Globe. December 9, 1925.