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Robert W. Larrow


Robert W. Larrow (April 27, 1916–August 2, 1991) was an American attorney, politician, and judge from Vermont. He served as an associate justice of the Vermont Supreme Court for seven years. The Vermont Encyclopedia describes him as "among a small group that led to the revitalization of the Vermont Democratic Party in the 1950s and 1960s, ending the Republican hegemony in Vermont."

Larrow was born in Vergennes, Vermont, on April 27, 1916. He attended the Vergennes schools and graduated from the College of the Holy Cross and Harvard Law School, receiving his law degree in 1939.

Larrow served as Burlington city attorney for nineteen years, from 1944 to 1963. He was elected to the Vermont House of Representatives in 1949, serving until 1951.

Larrow unsuccessfully ran for governor in 1952 against incumbent Lee E. Emerson. At the time, Larrow was thirty-six years old and known for being "bright and articulate," with "considerable energy and drive despite his Sydney Greenstreet-like girth." With his "diligent work habits and sharp wit, Larrow ran a vigorous campaign": he lost, but received 60,051 votes, some 40 percent of the vote: a record high for a Democratic candidate for governor, and nearly 40,000 more votes than the Democratic candidate had received in 1950. Larrow's run was the first time in decades that a Democrat had actively and credibly campaigned for governor, and a sign of the resurgence of the Democratic party in Vermont after decades of Republican dominance.

He ran as the Democratic candidate for state attorney general in 1962, on a ticket with Philip H. Hoff; Larrow lost to Charles E. Gibson Jr., but Hoff won, becoming the first Democratic governor of Vermont in more than a hundred years. The next year, Larrow unsuccessfully ran for mayor of Burlington.


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