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Pat Copeland, an Island treasure

Pat Copeland, an Island treasure

ANNA MARIA – Beloved Anna Maria resident, newspaper reporter and Island historian Pat Copeland passed away on Tues­day, June 13, at the age of 76.

She passed away at Manatee Memorial Hospital in Bradenton from complications associated with the chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and other respiratory challenges she faced in recent years.

In 2000, Pat joined the newly-formed Anna Maria Island Sun newspaper as a reporter and copy editor. As a Sun reporter, Pat spent many years covering the city of Holmes Beach, the Holmes Beach City Commission and West Manatee Fire Rescue. As the copy editor, she proofread and corrected almost every story that ran in The Sun during her tenure, which ended in 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic.

AMI Sun Publisher Mike Field said, “Pat was the first person I hired for The Sun’s news department when Maggie and I began planning in 1999 to start a weekly community newspaper on the Island. Looking back, that hire was one of the single most important things I ever did as owner and publisher of the paper. Pat’s knowledge of local history and her experience covering Island news brought instant credibility to the upstart Sun.

“Pat knew absolutely everybody and had a deserved reputation for treating the subjects of her stories with respect and honesty. Her ac­curacy in reporting and attention to detail were phenomenal. She almost never made a mistake. As an editor, she helped many young reporters by deftly catching errors in their copy long before the stories ever made it into print. If you needed to know who to talk to on any given assignment, Pat was the person you asked.

“Personally, I will always remember the wry sense of humor she had, one that often left me in stitches and helped diffuse the mounting pressures of approaching deadlines. It was a pleasure to have worked with Pat Copeland and an even greater one simply to have known her. She will be missed,” he said.

 An Island life

Pat was born and raised in Beavercreek, Ohio, just east of Dayton. Her husband of more than 50 years, Doug, hails from the same area. They met while they were both teaching English and language arts at a middle school in Dayton, Ohio.

“We had classrooms next to each other. That’s where we met,” Doug said.

After their first year together, Pat and Doug left their teaching jobs, moved to Celina, Ohio and for a year ran a fishing camp on Grand Lake. At the time, Doug’s parents lived on North Shore Drive in Anna Maria, where in 1972, Doug’s dad presided over Pat and Doug’s wedding during their visit to Florida.

Pat Copeland, an Island treasure
Pat and Doug Copeland were married in Anna Maria and enjoyed more than 50 years of marriage on the Island. – Copeland family | Submitted

When Pat and Doug moved to Bradenton Beach in 1973, Pat went to work at Trader Jack’s and Doug later joined the staff as a bartender.

In 1974, they bought their home in Anna Maria, where Pat would live for the rest of her life.

“Back then, the Island was still a resident-based com­munity. Probably 99% of the people that worked at Trader Jack’s lived on the Island, back when affordable annual rentals were always available. That’s gone away,” Doug said.

Pat left Trader Jack’s in January 1978 when she was pregnant with their first daughter, Layla Copeland.

 Island Historian

After giving birth to Layla in 1978 and to Anna Maria Copeland in 1980, Pat spent some time as a stay-at-home mom. In 1981, she became a stringer for the Island Herald. Over the years, she picked up additional freelance duties with several other publica­tions including The Bradenton Herald, Camp-orama maga­zine and The Weekender. In 1987, she became the editor of the Anna Maria Islander Press, where she also served as a reporter.

When the Islander Press closed, Pat bought all the bound newspaper copies, clip files and other files to prevent them from potentially being destroyed. Anna Maria Mayor Ray Simches put Pat and Island historian and author Carolyne Norwood in touch with each other and in 1990 the two co-founded the Anna Maria Island Historical Society and guided the de­velopment of the Anna Maria Island Historical Museum.

Pat Copeland, an Island treasure
Carolyne Norwood and Pat Copeland co-founded the Anna Maria Island Historical Society in 1990. – Submitted

“The first year, they rented the old vet’s office on Crescent Avenue and Ed Chiles paid the rent and the utilities,” Doug said.

A year later, the Historical Society moved to the mu­seum’s current location on Pine Avenue.

“History is important. For the Island, there was no better history than the old newspapers. Pat wrote the Island’s history every week,” Doug said of the news stories that can still be read at the museum.

When asked what Pat loved about being a reporter, Doug said, “The interaction with people. She was honest, had integrity and felt she could present an accurate sense of what was happening on the Island.”

In the 1980s, the Copeland family took a pair of month-long summer camping trips in a Volkswagen bus with family friend and well-known

Little League baseball coach Lou Fiorentino. After Lou died, Pat, Doug and others started an annual fund­raiser in Lou’s name to raise money to send Island kids to off-Island summer camps, which they did from 1998 to 2014.

When asked how Pat will be remem­bered, Doug said, “She was a great wife and mother. Honest, ethical and loved by many. I’ll miss her. She was always willing to have a good time.”

 Mother Extraordinaire

“She was a great mom. She wel­comed everyone in our house. I could show up with anybody and say, ‘Mom they’re having dinner with us,’ and she’d say, ‘OK, no problem,’ ” Layla said.

“Pat’s philosophy was she’d rather have the girls here with their friends than have them out somewhere else not knowing who they’re with or what they’re doing. That’s a pretty good philosophy,” Doug added.

“The 1960s helped shape my mom’s consciousness and who she was. She was part of the hippie era, adamantly opposed to the Vietnam War. She protested for her beliefs, but she also never lost sight of the American soldiers who were her neighbors, classmates and friends. The music of the 1960s was the soundtrack to our childhood and she shared her love of music, writers and poetry with us,” Layla said.

When asked what she learned from her mom, Layla said, “I learned how to cook, how to sew, how to be a mother and how to be a wife. She gave me my best friend, my sister. When mom’s breathing got bad and it was hard for her to talk, we’d text with her every day.

Pat Copeland, an Island treasure
Pat Copeland showed her whimsical side during a childhood bike ride with her daughter Layla. – Copeland family | Submitted

“She was always really funny, really silly and she always made you laugh. She was really generous and always thinking of others. She loved watching our kids draw and play in the pool. When she could no longer go outside, she’d open the window and sit there to watch them play and still be a part of it. We always had a Sunday or Saturday dinner here. In this family, food is love and she was a great cook,” Layla said.

“We always ate together. Both girls became great cooks because they grew up thinking food was important,” Doug said.

Pat Copeland, an Island treasure
Family was of the utmost importance to Pat Copeland. – Copeland family | Submitted

“When I was 14, I decided I was going to be a vegetarian and my sister later joined me,” Layla said. “Mom taught herself how to cook vegetarian food and she cooked two meals every night: one for her and dad and one for my sister and I. Every day, until we went to college, she packed us a gourmet lunch to take to school. She took the best care of us,” Layla said.

Pat Copeland, an Island treasure
In 2014, the Copeland family traveled to Italy together. – Copeland family | Submitted

Anna Maria Copeland lives in Rockville, Maryland. When asked about her mom, she said, “There was so much about my mom that was wonderful. She always uplifted people. Like a lot of parents, she told Layla and I that we could be and do anything, but she really meant it. Whenever I expressed a doubt about my abilities or qualifications, she would gently explain why whatever I was worrying about wouldn’t stop me from doing the thing I wanted to do if I truly wanted to do it. I saw her do this for other people as well. She had a special way of helping people believe in themselves. Another thing that was truly special about my mom was her open heart. She had love and kindness for anyone who needed it. She welcomed so many people into our home and lives and enriched all of us in the process.

“When my daughter Lily was born, I was surprised by how natural and easy it felt to be a mother. Later, I had the realization that it was easy because I had the best example to follow. I learned how to cook and bake and sew from her. I learned how to navigate the world with an open heart. I learned patience. I will miss her love and understanding. I will miss watch­ing her and Lily goof off together. I will miss sitting up late together talking about life. I will miss cooking and eating together.

“I want people to know how special my mother was. She was funny and smart. She loved rock-n-roll and acting silly. She was kind and thought­ful and creative. She wasn’t afraid to be different and she helped others feel comfortable in spite of their differ­ences,” Anna Maria said.

Pat Copeland, an Island treasure
Anna Hayden and her sister, Pat Copeland, got “framed” in this photo. – Copeland family | Submitted

Pat’s sister, Anna Hayden, said, “Pat had such a positive influence on my life. She opened my eyes to the world and always encouraged me with my art and photography. To see that she also had such a positive impact on her community makes me so very proud to be her sister.”

Community icon

In 2017, Pat was named the city of Anna Maria’s Citizen of the Year. Last week, the flags at the museum, City Pier Park, City Hall and the City Hall annex were flown at half-staff in Pat’s honor.

Pat Copeland, an Island treasure
In 2017, former Anna Maria Mayor Fran Barford presented Pat Copeland with the city of Anna Maria’s Citizen of the Year award. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Anna Maria Mayor Dan Murphy said, “The loss of Pat Copeland is a heavy loss for our Island community. Pat blazed a trail that is now her legacy. She was the woman who brought to life the images and tales from our Island’s past. Knowing our history is a key ingredient for a com­munity to remain relevant and instill a sense of pride in its citizens. Pat made us all aware that we are ‘Anna Marians,’ ” he said.

Pat Copeland, an Island treasure
The City Pier Park flags flew at half-staff in Pat Copeland’s honor. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Historical Society Vice President Barbara Murphy said, “The Historical Society has lost a devoted friend. Pat and Carolyne Norwood not only had a passion for the Island history, but the vision and determination to preserve it for generations to come. A year ago, the Historical Society’s annual scholarship awards were named after Pat. Thank you, Pat, for your contribution to preserving our rich Island history.”

Holmes Beach Mayor Judy Titsworth said, “Pat was an original. She had a deep con­nection to the Island and was a talented writer. She will be truly missed. We are fortunate to have the years that she invested in her historical work that helped preserve the Island’s treasures.”

Holmes Beach City Clerk Stacey Johnston said, “Pat was a beautiful person. Her smile was contagious. She absolutely loved her family, community, her job and her friends. She was an excellent writer; one I could always trust. Her perseverance towards the history of Anna Maria Island will allow Pat’s memory to live on forever.”

Pat Copeland, an Island treasure
The Copeland family sometimes gathered at Duffy’s Tavern in Holmes Beach. – Copeland family | Submitted

Holmes Beach Police Chief Bill Tokajer said, “She always gave the police department a fair shot. She reported everything fairly and she mentored other reporters to do the same. She was always a pleasure to speak with. I will miss her.”

Retired WMFR Fire Chief Andy Price said, “As a reporter, she would always ask questions so she could under­stand the issue – and not just enough to write a story. What she reported was accurate and it told the right story because she understood what was going on. When Pat wrote an article, it was accurate to the T. Pat was one of the best jour­nalists I’ve ever dealt with. Pat was a wonderful person and it showed in her reporting.”

Former Holmes Beach Mayor and County Com­missioner Carol Whitmore said, “I met Pat when I first got into Island politics in 1991. Throughout the years we became friends and we still communicated after she left the paper. She was a wonderful person and she had a passion for the Historical Society. I’m happy I got to know her and Doug.”

Pat Copeland, an Island treasure
Pat and Doug Copeland served as “The Bowling Police” during one of the annual O’Connor Bowling Challenge tournaments.- Copeland family | Submitted

Bradenton Beach Mayor John Chappie said, “Pat was a wonderful lady who really loved the Island community. She was a real giver and she was always there for the community.”

Island resident and business owner Ed Chiles said, “Pat was dedicated to the his­tory and the character of the Island. She was indefatigable, always working on it and never not involved. She was a great citizen of the Island. She will be missed but she will not be forgotten.”

Bradenton resident and longtime family friend Jean Couser said, “I’ve known Pat since the 70s, when she and I were waitresses at Trader Jack’s. Pat and Doug were schoolteachers who escaped the cold for something new, but I don’t think Pat ever strayed very far from educat­ing people, even if she didn’t do it in a classroom. Her family was so important to her and she and Doug created a purposeful life together. They raised two smart, talented women and Pat had a big influence on how successful those girls are.

Pat Copeland, an Island treasure
Pat and Doug Copeland dressed as Lois Lane and Superman for Halloween. – Copeland family | Submitted

“Pat’s talents went way beyond writing. She sewed Halloween costumes and knitted baby blankets. She surrounded herself with creative people and the par­ties she and Doug hosted were never dull. In many ways, I think Pat was the spirit of Anna Maria. She was always doing research for Historical Society, doing a story for The Sun or collecting books for her Little Free Library. She really loved the community.”

Pat Copeland, an Island treasure
Pat Copeland had the first Little Free Library in Anna Maria. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

AMI Historical Society board chairperson Liz Hager said, “We’re going to miss her. I loved working with Pat and Doug. Doug is a good friend of the museum too. I hope what they did for and on Anna Maria Island for so many years is appreciated. They named their daughter Anna Maria. That shows quite a bit of loyalty to the Island.

“When Pat could no longer stay on as president of the board, I was recruited to take it over. I loved going to talk to her and learning from her. During COVID, she’d leave a chair for me outside on the lawn and she would open the window and she’d stay inside and we could chat that way and have her bring me up to date on all the things that still needed to be done for the museum. My husband, Dennis, and I enjoyed going out to dinner with Pat and Doug. They were great connoisseurs of restaurants in the area. We had dinner together in April,” Hager said.

Bradenton resident Carrie Price was close friends with Layla and Anna while growing up on the Island.

“I was a frequent guest at their house for dinner. I probably ate there 150 times. Pat was a big part of my time on Island. She was so welcoming to me and always a great host. I was just one of many people who frequented their house for dinner and their company. Pat was very warm and inviting. She was a wonderful mom. She was so dedicated to the girls and she ran a very organized household. I have a lot of respect for that now that I have my own kids. She was a great reporter and she was so dedicated to everything she did,” Carrie said.

 

Related coverage

 

Sun staff remembers Pat Copeland 

Sun staff remembers Pat Copeland

Sun staff remembers Pat Copeland

The Sun staff is remembering Pat Copeland fondly after the news of her passing last week.

Pat was the first reporter hired to staff the Anna Maria Island Sun. Publisher Mike Field remembers hiring her while sitting on paint buckets in the newspaper’s brand-new office.

Pat was working for the Bystander at the time and was a colleague of Tom Vaught, who was writing for the Island Free Press.

“Competition was not Pat’s style, nor mine,” he said. “We met each other in February 1993 at Holmes Beach City Hall. I did not truly know what to expect. Pat volunteered her knowledge of the Island and local city politics. I knew I could trust her with her wealth of Island background expertise.”

The Island Free Press folded and Vaught joined the Bradenton Herald team.

“One evening, Pat called me informing me about her leap to a new Island paper, the Anna Maria Island Sun. She asked me to consider a change along with her. I went to this newly created paper’s co-founding publisher and owner, Mike Field, and became a reporter along with Pat.”

Retired since 2020, Vaught remembers Copeland, then a copy editor, teasing him for his mistakes, like a sibling.

“We never doubted each other’s talents,” he said.

Copeland never aspired to work in a big city, he said. She wanted to cover the Island where she and her husband, Doug, raised their two daugh­ters, and she did.

“She was the queen of Island journalism,” he said, “and above all, a good friend.”

Sun staff remembers Pat Copeland
Shown here with West Manatee Fire Rescue Fire Commissioner Randy Cooper, Pat Copeland covered the WMFR meetings for many years. – Submitted

Staff writer and Digital Editor Kristin Swain recalls Copeland taking her under her wing and helping her establish her career on Anna Maria Island and in the news industry.

“By the time I arrived in the area fulltime in 2014, Pat was already established as a long-time Island legend,” she said. “Pat was one of the first people that I have been privileged to know on the Island. She was one of the nicest, most genuine and welcoming people I’ve ever known. Pat was one of those rare people who is impossible to forget and one that I will always be grateful to have had the privilege of knowing.”

Copeland worked diligently to help make her community a better place through her work with The Sun, her volunteerism, her work with the Anna Maria Island Historical Society and other organizations, Swain said.

“Though she’s no longer with us, her legacy in this community will endure for many, many years to come. Her community spirit will continue to radiate through the city of Anna Maria and the Island as a whole,” she said. “My sincerest condolences go out to her family, friends and everyone whose lives she touched. Pat left a little bit of her light with everyone she met. That light will continue to shine.”

Sun Editor Cindy Lane re­calls Copeland often breaking from her office demeanor with quick-on-the-uptake jokes, followed by her trademark smile and deep, hearty laugh.

Her coverage of the city of Holmes Beach earned her a reputation of accuracy and trustworthiness, and she covered the arts community and historical stories with enthusiasm, she said.

A model of organization, she archived every edition of The Sun at the Anna Maria Island Historical Society Museum, which she co-founded with Carolyne Norwood.

With her trademark spiral-bound calendar filled out each year in advance with remind­ers of upcoming events, she never missed a story, and as the “newsroom mom,” never let another reporter miss one of theirs, Lane recalled.

Widely known and appreci­ated for being detail-oriented as a reporter, Copeland was also an exacting copy editor with an institutional memory that saved everyone on the staff from embarrassment at one time or another. Once, a new reporter mentioned Lawton Chiles in a story without noting that he was a former Florida governor, and Pat caught the omission in time.

“Pat always made sure all the ‘i’s were dotted and all the ‘t’s were crossed,” Lane said. “She set an admirable example and a high bar for The Sun to follow.”

“As the Sun’s longtime copy editor, Pat Copeland caught and corrected many typos and mistakes I made when writing my weekly news stories, thus sparing me the embarrassment of seeing my errors in print,” Sun correspondent Joe Hendricks said.

Each Monday, Pat would go to The Sun office, print out every page of the paper and with her red marker notate all the corrections she’d then make using the computer software used to lay out the paper, he recalled.

“Working closely with editor and publisher Mike Field, Pat’s keen eye and attention to detail made The Sun a better paper, and she made me a better reporter with her historical perspective, factual knowledge, journalistic insights and corrective actions.”

In 2013, Pat took a brief leave of absence and went to Maryland to help care for her first grandchild, Lily.

“At the time, my duties with The Sun were limited to those of a part-time freelance correspondent. During Pat’s time away, I covered her Holmes Beach beat that included city commission meetings and other governmental matters. That assignment led to me later being assigned to cover the cities and city governments of Bradenton Beach and Anna Maria, which I still cover today,” Hendricks said.

“In 2017, I was honored to write about Pat being named the city of Anna Maria’s Citizen of the Year – an award she earned for the community spirit she embodied and the tireless work she did with the Anna Maria Island Historical Society.

I was also fortunate to become friends with Pat, her husband, Doug, and the Copeland family. Pat will be forever appreciated and greatly missed. Thanks, Pat for all you did for me, The Sun and the Anna Maria Island community. The Island is a better place because of you and a lesser place without you.”­

 

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Pat Copeland, an Island treasure 

Carolyne Norwood was Anna Maria’s preeminent historian

Carolyne Norwood was Anna Maria’s preeminent historian

ANNA MARIA – Carolyne Norwood played a vital role in preserving the history of Anna Maria Island. She also made a lot of friends during her decades on the Island.

Carolyne Norwood was Anna Maria’s preeminent historian
George and Carolyne Norwood loved Anna Maria Island. – The Norwood Family

Norwood, who passed away on Jan. 4, authored two books about the Island: “Anna Maria Island, The Early Days, 1893-1940” and “Anna Maria Island, 1940-1970, Tales of Three Cities, From Bean Point to Bridge Street.”

She and Pat Copeland co-founded the Anna Maria Island Historical Society and the Historical Museum.

Beginning in 1970, Norwood spent many years sharing stories and photographs about the Island while working as a reporter for publisher Don Moore at the original Islander newspaper.

In a “Remember When” column she wrote in 2000, Norwood said her time as a reporter made her realize how many “priceless artifacts from the early days on this island were disappearing,” and that inspired the formation of the Historical Society in 1990.

An Island icon

Historical Society member and museum volunteer Evelyn Hoskins met Norwood after moving to Anna Maria in 2007.

“Carolyn was so knowledgeable about the Island and she was such a wonderful, gracious, pleasant and friendly lady. She will be greatly missed. She was such an asset to this whole Island. She did such a wonderful thing taking the time to write those books and explain the history of the Island. She and Pat started the Historical Society. Without their hard work, we would not have the museum we have now,” Hoskins said.

Carolyne Norwood was Anna Maria’s preeminent historian
Carolyne Norwood co-founded the AMI Historical Society and the Historical Museum. – The Norwood Family | Submitted

Island restaurauteur and businessman Ed Chiles provided the Historical Society with the financial support it needed to get started.

“Carolyne was an unflinching advocate for retaining the character of our Island. The Anna Maria Historical Society would not be what it is today without her passion,” Chiles said.

Seasonal Anna Maria resident Judy Hildman was close friends with Norwood and often visited her at her home in Bradenton.

“Her recording of the history of the Island is what made me fall in love with the Island. When I was reading her first book, I went exploring the places she wrote about, including the estate of ‘Miss Eddy the millionairess,’ which is now Banyan Tree Estates,” Hildman said.

“I had already read her book when I first met her at the museum. I said, ‘Carolyne, you’re my idol on the Island.’ I frequently told her that throughout the years and I was grateful that I was able to tell her that the day before she died. What a gift she left to the Island with the museum and the preservation of our history,” Hildman said.

Norwood and her husband George raised their four children on Anna Maria Island.

“As a mom, she was fun-loving and very adventuresome,” said her daughter, Linda Kinnan.

Carolyne Norwood was Anna Maria’s preeminent historian
Carolyne Norwood, second from left, celebrated her 90th birthday in 2017 with her sons John, Nick and Bill and her daughter Linda. – The Norwood Family | Submitted

“She really came to life once the family moved to Anna Maria back in 1956, when I was seven. My brothers and I all grew up on the Island. She loved the beach and our parents loved the Island lifestyle. They loved to fish, waterski and go boating, and they had a great group of friends. She was very creative, artistic and multi-talented and she always had projects going on,” Kinnan said.

Daryl Van Ostenbridge and her husband, John were close friends with the Norwoods.

“We had so many adventures. She arrived here from the Baltimore area not knowing anybody. We each had four children and Carolyne and I were both stay at home mothers, so we often were on the beach,” Van Ostenbridge said.

“She amazed me. She was a great journalist. She was co-founder of the Historical Society and she wrote two books. She could paint and she took classes all the time. She did calligraphy, art and stained glass. She was very talented. She’s at peace,” Van Ostenbridge said.

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Carolyne Norwood – dedicated to Island history