Bruce Charles Savage (1906 – 4 February 1993) was the United States Public Housing Administration Commissioner under President Dwight D. Eisenhower, serving from 1960 to 1961.[1] A moderate Rockefeller Republican, he sought to expand the services of national public housing at a time when public housing was limited in most areas and discouraged by many in both political parties. He was largely seen as a hands-on commissioner whose appointment was considered by others as an indication that Eisenhower was becoming serious about expanding public housing. The US Public Housing Authority was later expanded under Presidents Kennedy and Johnson and became the present-day Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD).
Savage was born in Indianapolis and attended Indiana, Northwestern, and Butler universities. In 1944, he founded the Bruce Savage Company (later Savage/Landrigan), a residential real estate company that was the largest such firm in Indiana until the late 1960s. The firm closed in 1984, following the death of his successor.
Savage was keenly aware of the needs of elderly housing and served on several related national, state, and local governmental and private groups. In addition, he served as the president of the Indianapolis Board of Realtors (1950), the Greater Indianapolis Progress Commission (GIPC). He was a member of various Indianapolis clubs such as Columbia Club, Kiwanis, Meridian Hills Country Club, and Beta Theta Pi. He was married to Marabeth Thomas Savage and was the father of Lynne Penelope Savage Landrigan and Sarah Anne Savage.