Everything about Fred Tuttle totally explained
Fred H. Tuttle (
July 18,
1919–
October 4,
2003) was an American dairy
farmer,
film actor and one-time candidate for the
U.S. Senate from the
state of
Vermont. He was born in
Tunbridge, Vermont, and lived there all his life, except for his service in the
United States Army during
World War II.
Tuttle left high school in his sophomore year to work on his family's farm. He married his wife Dorothy in
1961, and later retired from farming in
1984.
After his retirement, he appeared in several
movies directed by Vermont filmmaker
John O'Brien, including
Nosey Parker and
Man with a Plan. He starred in the latter, playing himself, a retired farmer who decides to run for U.S. Representative from Vermont.
In
1998, in a remarkable case of
pseudo-ostension, Tuttle was persuaded to run in the
Republican US Senate primary. His opponent was
Jack McMullen, a multi-millionaire who had lived in
Massachusetts for most of his life. McMullen faced opposition from some Vermont Republicans who felt that he was a
carpetbagger who apparently moved to Vermont for the sole purpose of establishing residency for a Senate run. The Vermont primary structure allows
Democrats and
Independents to vote in the Republican primary, and many people foresaw the possibility that Tuttle would beat McMullen by drawing votes across party lines. In addition, some may have hoped that a Tuttle campaign would help to publicize the film
Man with a Plan.
The ensuing campaign was remarkable in many ways. Tuttle campaigned on a platform that seemed
absurdist by the standards of contemporary politics. McMullen and the state Republican Party challenged Tuttle's ballot petition and got 95 of his signatures invalidated. Tuttle needed 23 more to stay on the ballot and he received 2,309 more signatures. McMullen then gave flowers to Tuttle in the hospital while Tuttle was there for knee surgery.
During the televised debate, Tuttle asked a series of humorous local knowledge questions rather than political questions. McMullen was unable to correctly pronounce the names of several Vermont towns, or correctly answer Fred's question "How many
teats a
Holstein got?," answering "Six", instead of the correct "Four". In the primary, Tuttle defeated McMullen by ten percentage points. Winning the primary with 55 percent of the vote, Tuttle promptly endorsed the incumbent Democrat,
Patrick Leahy.
Tuttle's campaign against Senator Leahy was notable for the continuing publicity Tuttle received and for his endorsement of Leahy. Tuttle commented that he didn't really want to win because he'd have to move to
Washington, D.C.. Despite his endorsement of his opponent, Tuttle garnered 48,051 votes (22 percent of the vote) in the actual election.
Tuttle was described by Senator Leahy as "the distilled essence of Vermonthood". He was considered by many to be an example of both the "everyman" and of the unique individualist. He was seen as a warm and friendly man who even into his eighties would charm the people that he met at the fairs and farming conventions he attended.
Tuttle died of a
heart attack after a day spent digging
potatoes, at his home in
Tunbridge, Vermont. He was buried in his overalls, with a pen in his pocket for autograph signing and a can of
Moxie by his side.
Filmography
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