Tricia Cotham

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

Patricia "Tricia" Ann Cotham (born 1978) is a former member of the North Carolina House of Representatives from the 100th district (Mecklenburg County) and congressional candidate. In March 2007, she was appointed by Governor Mike Easley, upon the recommendation of local Democratic Party leaders, to replace state Representative James B. Black, who had resigned. In 2008, she was named UNC Chapel Hill's School of Education's Young Alumna of the Year and the North Carolina Association of Educators (NCAE) graded Cotham an "A+" Legislator. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Tricia Cotham
rdf:langString Tricia Cotham
rdf:langString Tricia Cotham
xsd:date 1978-11-26
xsd:integer 10093304
xsd:integer 1113521495
rdf:langString North Carolina
rdf:langString University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
rdf:langString University of North Carolina at Charlotte
xsd:date 1978-11-26
rdf:langString medic
rdf:langString Tom White
rdf:langString Rick Miller
rdf:langString Gardenia Henley
rdf:langString Lloyd Scher
rdf:langString Tricia Cotham
rdf:langString Jay Holman
rdf:langString Yolanda Holmes
rdf:langString Elliot, Ryan
rdf:langString August 2020
xsd:integer 100
rdf:langString Representative
xsd:integer 180
rdf:langString Legislator, Educator, Business Owner
rdf:langString Democratic Party
rdf:langString Republican Party
<perCent> 100.0 0.81 0.84 1.52 3.85 31.25 4.3 17.1 25.93 42.51 21.17 28.89 74.07 21.13 47.81 78.83
rdf:langString North Carolina
xsd:integer 2017
xsd:integer 2007
rdf:langString Member of the North Carolina House of Representatives
rdf:langString from the 100th district
xsd:integer 192 235 245 444 853 1255 1559 2064 2385 4989 6165 6843 7685 8428 9578 9749 12400 12707 19548 24217 26391 29172
xsd:integer 2007
rdf:langString Patricia "Tricia" Ann Cotham (born 1978) is a former member of the North Carolina House of Representatives from the 100th district (Mecklenburg County) and congressional candidate. In March 2007, she was appointed by Governor Mike Easley, upon the recommendation of local Democratic Party leaders, to replace state Representative James B. Black, who had resigned. At 28 years old, Cotham became the youngest member of the 2007-2008 session of the state legislature and the youngest woman to ever serve in the NC House of Representatives. Cotham served as Co-Chair of the House's K-12 Education subcommittee from 2008-2010. In 2008, she was named UNC Chapel Hill's School of Education's Young Alumna of the Year and the North Carolina Association of Educators (NCAE) graded Cotham an "A+" Legislator. Prior to serving in the legislature, Cotham began her first year of classroom teaching in 2001, where she taught social studies and was named Most Outstanding First Year Middle School Teacher of the East Region of the Charlotte-Mecklenburg School District. She started her first year as an Assistant Principal at East Mecklenburg High School in the fall of 2006 and was appointed to the legislature in March 2007. Cotham chose not to run for re-election in 2016. She later said she would consider running for the U.S. House of Representatives in the newly redrawn 12th congressional district. Cotham filed to run for the seat on March 21, 2016, but lost the primary to incumbent Congresswoman Alma Adams.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 12379

data from the linked data cloud