Patsy Bullitt Collins

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Patsy_Bullitt_Collins an entity of type: Thing

Dorothy Priscilla "Patsy" Bullitt Collins (1920-2003) was an American philanthropist. Born in Seattle on September 24, 1920 to the wealthy A. Scott Bullitt and Dorothy Bullitt, during her childhood she lived in a 23-room mansion in The Highlands. She graduated from Vassar College in 1942. She married Josiah Collins VI, son of Seattle politician Josiah Collins, in 1947. Her first husband, Larry Norman, a USAAF navigator, had been killed over Germany or as a POW in 1943. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Patsy Bullitt Collins
rdf:langString Patsy Bullitt Collins
rdf:langString Patsy Bullitt Collins
rdf:langString Seattle
xsd:date 2003-06-24
xsd:date 1920-09-24
xsd:integer 30498386
xsd:integer 1115071482
xsd:date 1920-09-24
xsd:date 2003-06-24
rdf:langString Philanthropy
rdf:langString American
rdf:langString Chairperson, King Broadcasting Company
rdf:langString A. Scott Bullitt and Dorothy Bullitt
rdf:langString State Senator Josiah Collins
rdf:langString US Solicitor General William Marshall Bullitt
rdf:langString Dorothy Priscilla "Patsy" Bullitt Collins (1920-2003) was an American philanthropist. Born in Seattle on September 24, 1920 to the wealthy A. Scott Bullitt and Dorothy Bullitt, during her childhood she lived in a 23-room mansion in The Highlands. She graduated from Vassar College in 1942. She married Josiah Collins VI, son of Seattle politician Josiah Collins, in 1947. Her first husband, Larry Norman, a USAAF navigator, had been killed over Germany or as a POW in 1943. She was chairperson of King Broadcasting Company, founded by her mother, from 1972 until 1992 when it was sold to The Providence Journal. After her parents' death, she and her sisters donated $100 million to the Bullitt Foundation for environmental causes, bought classical radio station KING-FM and donated it to the Seattle Symphony, Seattle Opera and what is now ArtsFund. She died at her home in First Hill, Seattle, on June 24, 2003. She bequeathed a final $71.5 million to CARE, The Nature Conservancy and the Trust for Public Land, among the top 20 largest American charitable donations of the year.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 3501
xsd:gYear 1920
xsd:gYear 2003

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