First Lady Diane Patrick has her own record of excellence and distinguished professional and public service. A lawyer, teacher, mother and active member of her community, Mrs. Patrick has extensive experience in many walks of life.
Born in 1951, Mrs. Patrick spent her early childhood sharing a Brooklyn brownstone with her parents, siblings, and extended family. Her grandfather was the first African-American elected to public office in Brooklyn, and co-authored the Baker-Metcalf bill, the nation’s first law enacted to prohibit discrimination in public housing.
Mrs. Patrick attended public schools from 1st grade through college. Following in her mother’s footsteps, she received her BA in early childhood education in 1972, graduating with honors from Queens College of the City University of New York.
After graduation, Mrs. Patrick spent five years teaching elementary school in New York City. When the city’s bankruptcy of 1976-77 forced severe cuts in public resources, including her job, she crossed the country to study at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles.
At Loyola, the First Lady began her study of labor and employment law, which she practices today. Her exemplary academic performance and public service won her an American Jurisprudence Award and the school’s Outstanding Graduate Award. She received her Juris Doctor in 1980, and was admitted to the California Bar that same year.
Mrs. Patrick joined the firm of O’Melveny and Myers, and in 1983, was asked to assist in the opening of its New York City office. Recently engaged to Deval Patrick, the young couple relocated to the East Coast, where Mr. Patrick took a position with the NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund. They were married in 1984.
In 1986, a year after the birth of their first daughter Sarah, the Patrick family moved to Massachusetts. Mrs. Patrick took a position at Harvard as University Attorney in the Office of General Counsel, where she spent six years before becoming Harvard’s Director/Associate Vice President for Human Resources.
In 1994, when Deval Patrick was chosen to head the U.S. Justice Department’s Civil Rights division, Mrs. Patrick took a job with the Washington D.C. firm Hogan and Hartson, where she worked with both the education and labor and employment law practice groups.
The First Lady joined the law firm of Ropes & Gray in Boston in 1995. As a partner, she has been able to combine her passion for education and her background in labor and employment law.
Throughout her life and professional career, Diane Patrick has dedicated herself to various communities, and currently serves on the Boards of the United Way of Massachusetts Bay, the Posse Foundation and Jane Doe, Inc. She has also served as a volunteer member of the Commonwealth's Foster Care Review Unit, Trustee and Director for Arts Boston, Trustee for the Brigham & Woman's Hospital, and Overseer at Children's Hospital Boston, among others.
As a former public school teacher, she has seen first-hand how education is essential in workforce development, civic engagement, and building communities. She understands both the challenges and rewards of the classroom, and will work closely with the Governor on early education and domestic violence issues.
The First Lady believes in the power of early-start education for pre-K and kindergarten children, saying, “The quality of a child’s early start influences the success of that young person well into adulthood. It is critical that our children get the tools, skills, and nurturing that they need at such an important time in life.”
Diane and Deval Patrick have been married for over two decades and have two college-age daughters, Sarah and Katherine. The Patrick family has lived in Milton, in a house on Deval’s high school paper route, since 1989.
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Namugongo Fund for Special Children (NFSC) is a community based Non-Governmental Organization (NGO) in Uganda, helping orphaned and other vulnerable children reach their full potential through education and other opportunities.NFSC was founded in 1986 caring for handicapped children in Namugongo and surrounding communities. Children were sent to vocational schools, others were given medical operations and/or devices to help them cope with their handicaps.When the village became inundated by the death of many parents; Rosette Serwanga more...
GRIFFIN FAMILY FOUNDATION -
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FOCUS - Friends of children in more...
JCRC - Joint Clinical Research more...
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SPARK CENTRE - formely the Children’s AIDS Program) is a model more..
NFSC is a donor-driven organization, and needs support to provide food, medication, clothing r more...
Namugongo Fund for Special Children
Block 223 Plot 33 Kyaliwajjala
P.O. Box 10634
Kampala, Uganda
(25677) 258-7857
(25675) 248-7299
NFSC – USA
22 Morrill Street
Boston MA 02125
Phone:.............. (617) 775-8884
Phone:.............. (617) 448-0120
Email:............... info@nfschildren.org
The SPARK Center at Boston Medical Center has worked with NFSC since 2002 to enhance levels of support for orphans . more...
NFSC program site is located in Uganda’s Wakiso District. A large degree of regional variation exists within the NFSC’s multiple more...
Namugongo Fund for Special Children provides an array of holistic supports designed to meet the holistic need more...