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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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