Career
Bolack was a self-educated oilman who learned geology from correspondence courses. He was also a rancher and owner of the Albuquerque Dukes minor-league baseball team from 1956 to 1963. In 1957 he unsuccessfully ran for election to the United States. House of Representatives, losing soundly to Joseph Montoya.
In 1960, Bolack was elected Lieutenant Governor by a margin of 279 votes, becoming the first Republican Lieutenant Governor in New Mexico since 1928.
That Bolack, an "Anglo" (or New Mexican not of Spanish or Indian descent), was able to defeat a candidate with Spanish ancestry in statewide elections was seen as one of several signs of the decline of the influence of long-time United States. Senator Dennis Chavez. Democrats challenged the narrow victory, on the basis that some voters on Navajo reservations should have been required to vote outside of their reservations, but the New Mexico Supreme Court ruled in Bolack"s favor.
Governor Edwin L. Mechem was defeated in his bid for re-election and, when he resigned on November 30, 1962, Bolack became Governor, serving the remainder of Mechem"s term. Bolack, in his first act as Governor, appointed Mechem to fill the vacancy in the United States Senate caused by the recent death of Dennis Chavez.
Bolack served as Governor until newly elected Governor Jack M. Campbell was sworn in on January 1, 1963.
In 1976, Bolack co-chaired a bipartisan group that aimed to reform New Mexico"s election legislation, after the state was included on a list of several states with unfair elections. In addition to lobbying for reform, the group offered $1,000 to anyone providing information leading to the arrest of an election-law violator. Bolack suffered a stroke in 1985 and used a wheelchair until his death in 1998.
In line with his last request, his body was cremated and his ashes were scattered over his Farmington ranch using 16 specially-made fireworks.
The ranch is now the site of the Bolack Museum of Fish and Wildlife, which displays over 4,000 stuffed animals including many of rare species. The Tom Bolack Urban Forest Park in Albuquerque is named in his honor.