Patricia M. Collins | |
Office: | Mayor of Caribou, Maine |
Term Start: | 1981 |
Term End: | 1982 |
Birth Name: | Patricia McGuigan |
Birth Date: | 14 April 1927 |
Birth Place: | Colombia |
Death Date: | (age 96) |
Death Place: | Caribou, Maine |
Occupation: | Civic leader |
Children: | 6, including Susan |
Education: | University of Maine University of Maine at Presque Isle |
Patricia M. Collins (April 14, 1927 – March 5, 2024) was an American civic leader and politician who served as the mayor of Caribou, Maine from 1981 to 1982. She has chaired numerous local and state boards and organizations, including the Caribou School Board, the Maine Committee for Judicial Responsibility and Disability, Catholic Charities Maine, and the University of Maine Board of Trustees. She was inducted into the Maine Women's Hall of Fame in 2005.
Collins is the matriarch of a political family: her husband, Donald Collins, was also a former mayor of Caribou and four-term state senator, and her daughter, Susan Collins, is the senior United States senator from Maine.
Born Patricia McGuigan[1] in Colombia and raised in Port Jervis, New York,[2] Collins earned a bachelor's degree in mathematics from the University of Maine in 1970[3] and a second bachelor's degree in art from the University of Maine at Presque Isle.[4]
Collins has been active on many local and state boards and organizations. She was a member of the Caribou School Board from 1967 to 1975, serving as chair of that body in her final year.[4] She was director of the Caribou Public Library, advisory board member of the Maine Public Broadcasting Network, member of the Cary Medical Center Auxiliary, member of the University of Maine at Presque Isle committee on graduate studies, member of the Aroostook County Emergency Medical Services Committee, and chair of the Red Cross Caribou Flood Disaster Fund.[3] She was the religious education coordinator for the Holy Rosary Catholic Church for eight years.[4]
She chaired the Maine Committee for Judicial Responsibility and Disability, and Catholic Charities Maine.[3] [5] In 1987 she became a member of the University of Maine Board of Trustees, serving as chairman of that board from 1991 to 1994.[4] [6] In 1993 she was a member of the board's five-person search committee for a new University of Maine chancellor following the resignation of Robert Woodbury.[7]
Collins joined the Caribou City Council in 1978. In January 1981 she was unanimously elected mayor of Caribou, making her the second woman to fill that post.[8] Her appointment made her and her husband the first married couple to each serve as mayor of the city; Donald Collins was the second mayor of Caribou in 1968.[8]
In November 1981 she ran for a second term as mayor against a field of five candidates.[3] Both she and incumbent deputy mayor Roy W. Doak retained their seats.[9]
Collins is an artist. In 1991 she exhibited her portrait series of Maine legislators at several University of Maine venues.[4]
In 2005 she was inducted into the Maine Women's Hall of Fame.[5] [10] With the induction of her daughter, United States Senator Susan Collins, in 2011, it marked the first time both a mother and daughter became members of the Maine Women's Hall of Fame.[10]
She and her husband Donald had six children.[4] Donald was the retired president of the S. W. Collins Company, a fifth-generation lumber business now led by two of their sons.[1] Donald also served as mayor of Caribou in 1968[8] and was a four-term state senator.[1] Their daughter, Susan Collins, is currently serving her fifth term as the senior United States Senator from Maine.[11]