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Patricia Louise (Collier) Jacobson

Posted 2018-04-02 by Judy Wight Branson
The Daily Courier, Prescott, Arizona
Sunday, April 1, 2018, page 8a

Our Beloved Mother, Patricia Louise Collier Jacobson, was blessed to
be called home by her Lord on March 26, 2018. She had just
celebrated her 85th birthday on March 11th.

She was surrounded by her loving family and we are so grateful for
bearing witness to the graceful passing of this great woman.

Pat was born in Oakland, California, in 1933 to William and Louise
Collier. Bill was the only child of a Scottish photographer who
emigrated to the United States and eventually settled in Denver.
Louise was a grand-daughter of Orrin Porter Rockwell, one of the
first five men baptized by Joseph Smith.

She was very proud of her genealogy, which includes Mayflower
passenger George Soule, pioneers who helped settle Kirkland and
Mesa, members of the Mormon Battalion, and even a survivor of The
Battle of the Alamo.

Pat lived all over the Southwest during her childhood because her
father was a miner who moved his family anywhere he could find work
- small camps in the wilderness or copper and silver mining
companies in Nevada, Colorado, Idaho, and Bisbee, before settling in
Miami, Arizona.

She graduated from Miami High School as the class valedictorian in
1950. After a year at Woodbury College in Los Angeles, she
transferred to the University of Arizona, where she met her future
husband, Eino M. Jacobson. They married on Aug. 16, 1952.

Eino graduated from law school in 1957; his first job was with
Favour & Quail in Prescott. They moved from Tucson with their two
young children, Melanie and Marcus. Daughters Robin, Monica and
Dianne were all born in Prescott.

A voracious reader and curious about everything, Pat imbued her
children with her abiding faith in her Lord (she became a Catholic
in the fourth grade), and love of Mother Nature, literature,
history, archeology, astronomy, ancient worlds, music, theater, and
cinema. Her children’s real education, however, was held at the
dinner table, where Pat and Eino did their best to keep five high-
energy kids under control by enforcing polite manners, telling us
stories about their childhoods, teaching us songs and jokes,
engaging us in current events and what it all meant, and otherwise
creating five adults with a love of knowledge, an abiding commitment
to our democracy, and a wicked sense of humor.

Pat supported her husband’s efforts to help resurrect the Republican
Party in Yavapai County in the early 1960’s (Eino was elected
Yavapai County Attorney in 1964). She was a member of the Jayettes
(an auxiliary to their JayCees husbands) and for over 20 years was
an active member and officer of the Yavapai County Republican Women.
She and her GOP sisters worked hard to achieve the goal that the
Arizona Republican Party supported a ratification of the Equal
Rights Amendment (sent to the States in 1972).

For 30 years she was a devoted volunteer at The Sharlot Hall Museum,
serving numerous terms on their Board of Directors during which the
museum transformed into a first-class historical institution. Over
the years, most folks knew her as the lady at the reception desk. A
strict grammarian, she edited the museum’s publications for decades
until she was unable to continue due to macular degeneration.

Pat is survived by her children, Melanie, Marcus, Robin, Monica and
her husband James Beck, and Dianne; grandchildren, Dylan Cook and
his wife Kayla, Justin Cook, Tessa Milosevich, Colin Levy, and
Sophia Levy; her great-grand-daughter, Adelaide Cook; her sister,
Alice Collier; and many cousins, nieces and nephews.

She was preceded in death by her parents, her beloved husband Eino,
her sister Sandy, and her grandson Nathan Daniel Milosevich.

A Celebration of Life will be held at 11 a.m. on Saturday, April 7,
at Hampton Funeral Home, 240 South Cortez Street. At 1 p.m., a
buffet reception will follow at the Marina Room at The Hassayampa
Inn.

In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to The Sharlot Hall Museum
in her honor.

Memories may be posted at
http://www.hamptonfuneralhome.com/obituaries/

Information provided by survivors.




Note: These obituaries are transcribed as published and are submitted by volunteers who have no connection to the families. They do not write the obituaries and have no further information other than what is posted within the obituaries. We do not do personal research. For this you would have to find a volunteer who does this or hire a professional researcher.

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