Hartford Courant

Collier, Mary T "Madge"

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Mary "Madge" T. Collier received her Wings on December 25, 2023.

A resident of Manchester, formerly Hartford, she passed away peacefully in the care of loved ones. A devoted mother, nana, sister, aunt and friend to many.

Born in Springfiel­d, TN on January 12, 1941, to the late Oscar Terry and Mable (Bell) Terry Stone and one of eight children. A central figure at Pearl H.S. and Tennessee State University, Madge became one of the first Black secretarie­s in the Nashville region.

In the 1960s, the Collier's relocated to CT. The great migration to the North presented fresh, new opportunit­ies to achieve lifelong aspiration­s. A journey to the greater Hartford/new Haven area afforded Mary ways to fulfill her wildest dreams. This resulted in enrolling at the Ophelia Devore Modeling School (NYC), continuing her studies, and pursuing a mission to promote the welfare of families.

Ms. Mary was instrument­al in the early years of the founding of the Amistad House, located at the corner of Clark and Capen Streets in Hartford. It establishe­d social programs such as the first infant daycare center and group home for high school-age girls. Michael's Roman Catholic Church became the Amistad House in 1972. '

Ms. Collier obtained roles as a long-time staffer in the late Senator and The Honorable Governor Lowell P. Weicker, Jr.'s Hartford Offices, city mayors and advisor to local trailblaze­rs. Her inspiratio­nal spirit and exceptiona­l impact were warmly felt by many, whereas she was affectiona­tely known as the "Queen of Hartford," who shared lessons learned and affirmed the under-resourced.

A tough cookie with a giant presence who worked tirelessly toward the betterment of others. Anyone blessed to develop a relationsh­ip with Mary, soon realized how much she cared and how much they mattered. A wellrespec­ted, unrivaled voice, committed to supporting others toward reaching their full potential. She always diligently demonstrat­ed a belief in the human spirit and the proverb that "It takes a village to raise a child." Mom Collier loved her children. By quickly establishi­ng friendship­s and fellowship­s throughout CT, she raised seven children, two nieces, and two nephews within caring community circles. Actively involved with various civic organizati­ons; and a member of several boards: the Hartford YWCA Board; the Hartford Job Corps; the United Way; as well as the Urban League Education Committee. Mary was also politicall­y active as co-founder and co-chairperso­n of the CT Chapter of the Congressio­nal Black Caucus Braintrust, co-founder of both the State Chapter of the Black Republican Council and the State Chapter of the Political Congress of Black Women.

Mary Collier received numerous awards from many communitie­s in recognitio­n of her sincere dedication. She was the proud recipient of the Minority Supplier Advocacy Award in 1988 from the CT Minority Purchasing Council; the Outstandin­g Contributi­on Award in 1990 from the Minority Business Developmen­t Center and the Exceptiona­l State of Connecticu­t Minority Enterprise Developmen­t Agency's Unparallel­ed Commitment Award in 1992.

A fruitful career in the public sector resulted in a one-term appointmen­t as Commission­er for Hospitals and Healthcare that began in March 1991 by former Governor Weicker. Countless stories, upon stories, revealed all of the good work accomplish­ed and resulted in a second appointmen­t, again by Weicker in July 1992, as Managing Director for the State of Connecticu­t's Inter-agency Business Developmen­t Office.

After a short stint in the private business sector, as Vice President of Operations of the Cellular Group, Inc., Mary returned to her first love and passion as a public servant. This led her to neighborin­g Boston, MA, in leadership roles at the New England Minority Purchasing Council. Thereafter, Mary T. Collier held different roles in Hartford's surroundin­g towns, supporting youth, minority businesses, healthcare initiative­s, voter registrati­on, and underserve­d communitie­s. Minister Collier, a woman of unwavering Christian faith, was a member of Messiah Missionary Baptist Church (Bloomfield). She is survived by children: Trudy C. Robinson; Tracy (Kimberly); Troxel; Tania (H Thomas) Fletcher; Treda Collier (Howard) Dickenman; Terry; Teresia Bost and stepson Curtis (Sang Ok) Bradley. Siblings: Betty Durett; Edward "Sonny" Terry; James "Steve" Terry; Edna "Tina" Terry and a host of grandchild­ren, great grandchild­ren, relatives and dear friends.

Predecease­d by children: Antonio Frazier; Patricia Claypool; Harold Frazier and Travis. Her parents: Mable Terry Stone and Oscar Terry. Siblings: Martha Wells; Robert "Bubba" Terry and Catherine Terry.

The kindness and care shown to our mom is sincerely appreciate­d. We wish to thank the medical profession­als; the Manchester Memorial Critical Care Team; the Visiting Nurse & Health Services of CT Hospice Care; neighbors and friends.

Funeral Services are on Friday, January 5, 2024, at 10:30 am at South Church, 90 Main Street, New Britain, with calling hours at 9:30 am and parking diagonally across from South Church at Szczesny Garage. 35 Bank Street, New Britain. All Faith Memorial Chapel, 90 John Fitch Blvd, South Windsor is in charge of arrangemen­ts. Online expression­s of sympathy can be shared at www.allfaithme­morial.com. To access the service via livestream, follow the Youtube channel: South Church, New Britain, CT or the South Congregati­onalfirst Baptist Church Facebook page or link on Mary T. Collier's obituary page at www.allfaithme­morial.com.

Please sign guestbook at courant.com/obituaries

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