Margaret Doud | |
Office: | Mayor of Mackinac Island, Michigan |
Term Start: | April 14, 1975 |
Predecessor: | Clem Gunn |
Birth Name: | Margaret M. Doud |
Birth Date: | 29 May 1943 |
Mother: | Jannette Doud |
Father: | Robert Doud |
Margaret M. Doud (sometimes known as M. M. Doud) (born May 29, 1943) is the mayor of Mackinac Island, Michigan.[1] Doud has served as the mayor since April 14, 1975, making her the longest currently serving mayor in the United States.
Margaret M. Doud was born May 29, 1943.[2] Doud was born May 29, 1940. Her father, Robert Doud, and her grandfather, James Doud, both were mayor of Mackinac Island prior to her tenure. She is a graduate of Central Michigan University.
Doud was first appointed to the Mackinac Island City Council in 1974, filling the term of retiring council-member Dennis Brodeur.[3] In 1975, Doud defeated former mayor Otto Emmons to succeed retiring incumbent Clemens Gunn. She took office on April 14, 1975.[4]
On May 22, 2005, she was given special recognition for her service. This included a certificate of recognition by Senator Debbie Stabenow and a tribute by the State of Michigan and then-Governor Jennifer Granholm. She was also presented with a flag that was flown over the U.S. Capitol building by Fr. Jim Williams, the pastor of Ste. Anne's Church, on behalf of Congressman Bart Stupak.[5]
As well as being the mayor, she managed the historical Windermere Hotel along with her mother, Jannette Doud, and now manages it full-time after her mother's death in 2015.[6] She occasionally contributes to The Mackinac Island Town Crier, the island's local weekly, seasonal newspaper.