Background
A son of John Anthony Notte and Eva Theresa (Rondina) Notte, he was born in Providence, Rhode Island.
governor of Rhode Island officer
A son of John Anthony Notte and Eva Theresa (Rondina) Notte, he was born in Providence, Rhode Island.
Notte graduated from the Boston University Law School in 1935.
The couple had two children together. He went on to practice law and served as town solicitor in North Providence in 1937. During his undergraduate years, Notte joined Alpha Phi Delta.
During World World War II he served in the United States Navy and rose to the rank of lieutenant.
Just after return to home he was elected Chairman of the Rhode Island Veterans’ Bonus Board. Notte resigned from Green"s staff after he was elected Secretary of State, a post he held from 1957 to 1958.
He was a delegate to the 1960 Democratic National Convention and became the 57th Lieutenant Governor of Rhode Island in 1959 and served until 1961 under Republican Christopher Delegate Sesto (Rhode Island Governor and his deputy are elected at the separate ballots). Notte was elected Governor in 1960, defeating Delegate Sesto, and held this post from January 3, 1961 to January 1, 1963 – one single two-year term.
Under his administration, a family court was established and Rhode Island held its first one-day, one-place Democratic and Republican primaries
He was defeated for re-election by Republican John Chafee in the state"s tightest gubernatorial race ever – a margin of under 400 votes.
His defeat was mainly caused by withdrawn support from labor unions (he was the first Democratic Governor running without labor support), because of his support for a state income tax After he left office, he returned to his law practice and sought Democratic nomination in the special election to the United States House of Representatives in 1967 and lost the primary. He was a Catholic.
He later served as a member of staff of Senator Theodore F. Green from 1948 to 1956, and as Chairman of the North Providence Democratic town committee.