The first and only executive director of Preservation Trust of Vermont, Bruhn, who was 72, had battled poor health in recent years. “It was his heart that finally couldn’t keep up with him,” his obituary reports.
Bruhn lived in South Burlington. Among his many survivors is his partner, Colleen O’Neill, of Cornish, N.H.
“I can’t think of anybody who’s been more important to the fabric of life in Vermont over the last 40 years than Paul,” said Candace Page, a veteran journalist and a consulting editor at Seven Days who attended Burlington High School with Bruhn in the 1960s. The two remained close friends until Bruhn’s death.
With his well-reasoned, matter-of-fact manner and professorial, friendly countenance, Bruhn was beloved by those fighting to maintain Vermont’s small-town charm. He was also respected — and feared — by the developers who sought to alter it.
A fount of information about Vermont history and a range of other topics, Bruhn was also articulate and eminently quotable, qualities that made him a sought-after source for reporters.
He was known to crisscross the state, helping communities and village centers maintain their historic features. Bruhn saved general stores, churches and grange halls, and did his best to fight suburban sprawl.
He acted as an unofficial mediator between local officials and Walmart when the mega-retailer sought to establish a presence in Vermont during the 1990s. Rather than flat-out oppose the big box store, Bruhn focused on compromise. Walmart eventually opened a store in Bennington, finally giving the retailer a store in every U.S. state.
“You cannot drive through Vermont without seeing and experiencing Paul’s handiwork,” said Neale Lunderville, Preservation Trust’s board chair. “It happened in places large and small. Paul believed that Vermont was this truly special place and a place that was worth protecting and saving for future generations.”
In a written statement Friday, Leahy called Bruhn “one of the finest Vermonters I ever worked with, and one of the dearest and best friends we have both had, and we loved him.
“His work on historic preservation is equal to the work that anyone has ever done for the State of Vermont,” Leahy wrote. “Those countless success stories are preserved in brick, mortar, stone and wood across our state.”
Lunderville has been on the Preservation Trust of Vermont board since 2011, but he first met Bruhn in 2003. Lunderville had just run Republican Jim Douglas’ successful campaign for governor when late Seven Days columnist Peter Freyne suggested that the young political operative meet Bruhn. They quickly became fast friends.
“Our politics weren’t always the same, but we shared a deep and abiding love for Vermont,” Lunderville said. “We both liked to laugh and think about the future.”
Bruhn was a tireless worker until the day he died, Lunderville said. He recalled Bruhn leading various conservation groups in an effort to raise money to buy land to stop a development project planned for Interstate 89 exit 4 in Randolph.
One thing was still missing, Lunderville recalled. The planned development had forced sculptor Jim Sardonis to move his iconic whales’ tails project from Randolph to a field alongside Interstate 89 in South Burlington in 1999. So Sardonis, with backing from Bruhn, built a similar sculpture and recently unveiled it at the Randolph exit in July.
A smiling Bruhn, seated in a wheelchair, attended the ceremony on the land he’d help preserve.
“You can just imagine the whales underwater, snuggling up and dancing,” Bruhn told a Seven Days reporter at the event. “Most days, I have the best job in Vermont. And today is a great example of why.”
Correction, September 23, 2019: A previous version of this story misidentified the town where Walmart first opened in Vermont.



We all need to challenge ourselves to take up Paul’s legacy … let’s deeply understand our history, prioritize all the good that makes Vermont so unique, and strike Paul’s balance of both compromise and fighting like hell to create the future we want to see. RIP Paul Bruhn.
I had called Paul for comment on a story the day he died. Many times in my VT reporting career, which began way back in 1987, I could call Paul and come out of a short conversation with moving quotes that conveyed the enormous value of our historic buildings, beautiful main streets, gorgeous rural vistas, stunning farms and wonderful populace. His love for Vermont inspired the same in so many. Not to mention that he understood the crazy deadlines that are journalism, the voice of the people. Thank you, Paul.
Thanks Paul. All your important work will be appreciated for generations. You left some big shoes.
Paul had an amazing commitment not to a narrow view of historic preservation, but to viewing preservation as an essential component of building healthy communities. Paul also saw the importance of public buildings to maintaining healthy downtowns, not just in big cities, but in smaller towns as well.
As the past Editor of a small national publication, the Planning Commissioners Journal, I was grateful to Paul for having provided support for our publishing two articles, both of which are still available online at no charge: Public Buildings Keep Town Centers Alive (at: https://ptvermont.org/public-buildings-kee… ) and Public Buildings Should Set the Standard (at: http://plannersweb.com/2001/01/public-buil… ). Paul’s support enabled us to publish these articles and get them out to thousands of readers across the U.S.