Mabel Coleman Reid (died 9 November 1969), also known by the Samoan name Sinaitaaga,[1] was an American Samoan politician. In 1953 she was one of the first two women elected to the Fono, when she won a seat in the House of Representatives.

Mabel Reid
Member of the House of Representatives
In office
1953–1954
Succeeded byPuiai Tufele
ConstituencyMaʻopūtasi County
In office
1956–1960
Preceded byPuiai Tufele
ConstituencyMaʻopūtasi County
Personal details
Died9 November 1969

Biography edit

Reid was one of ten children of American Navy sailor William Patrick Coleman and his Samoan wife Amata C. Kreuz.[2][3] Her brother Peter later served as Governor of American Samoa. She was educated at the Sacred Hearts Academy in Hawaii,[4] and became a stenographer and clerk of the High Court of American Samoa.[2] She married Peter E. Reid,[2] and had two children, Peter and Mabel.[4] In 1947 she became an agent for the new Samoan Area Airways, set up by her brother Lawrence.[5] She also became High Chief of Tali in Pago Pago.

In the 1953 legislative elections, Reid contested the Maʻopūtasi County seat in the House of Representatives, and was one of two women elected to the House alongside Zilpher Jennings.[6] Although she lost her seat to Puiai Tufele in the 1954 elections,[7] she defeated Tufele in the 1956 elections,[8] the only woman to win a seat in the 1956 elections.[1] During her second term she served as chair of the Ways and Means committee and as Acting Speaker of the House.[2][9] She was re-elected in 1958,[10] remaining in office until the end of the sixth legislature.[11]

Reid died in November 1969.[4]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Samoa legislator Torrance visitor The Los Angelese Times, 28 July 1957
  2. ^ a b c d Samoa Woman Solon Is Governor's Sister Honolulu Star-Bulletin, 19 August 1957
  3. ^ Mrs. Eubanks Dead In Calif. The Honolulu Advertiser, 13 March 1951
  4. ^ a b c Mabel Reid of American Samoa Dies The Honolulu Advertiser, p16
  5. ^ A New Pacific Airway Hawaii to Samoa Pacific Islands Monthly, August 1947
  6. ^ Elizabeth Cox (1996) Women, State, and Territorial Legislators, 1895-1995: A State-by-state Analysis, with Rosters of 6,000 Women, p331
  7. ^ Legislative Races Result In Many New Office Holders Honolulu Star-Bulletin, 21 December 1954
  8. ^ American Samoa News Letter Honolulu Star-Bulletin, 24 December 1956
  9. ^ Members of the Eastern Samoan parliamentary delegation Pacific Islands Monthly, June 1958
  10. ^ American Samoa News Letter Honolulu Star-Bulletin, 2 December 1958
  11. ^ A 40-year History of the Legislature of American Samoa, 1989, p335