The Twin Cities Catholic education community has lost a giant.
Brother Michael Collins, who in 1955 became one of the first black graduates of Minneapolis DeLaSalle High School and who came back in 1991 as president to lead the threatened institution to modern-day heights of enrollment, diversity and academic standing, has died.
Collins, 74, died Sunday at Catholic Eldercare in northeast Minneapolis, a few blocks from the Nicollet Island school, after a brief battle with cancer.
Under Collins, DeLaSalle, where nearly half of the 650 students are members of minority groups and a third live in or near poverty, boasted top-flight academics. It rivals predominantly white and wealthier private high schools in terms of National Merit Scholars and college placement rates.
"Brother Michael was somebody we feared [at age 14]; we were in awe of him because of his demeanor and command," said Chico Rowland, a once-homeless kid who graduated from DeLaSalle, worked there a few years and now works in digital media. "You knew he was the president. As a senior, he was someone with whom we had more camaraderie. As an employee, I had admiration."
Said Quentin Liggins, a DeLaSalle graduate who now works for Goldman Sachs: "Brother Michael saved my life. I was an intelligent teenager, but I lacked social awareness and the ability to carry myself in a respectful and professional manner. He really instilled in me ... the ability to dream and to execute on your dreams."
"He was a positive, powerful, African-American role model who encouraged us to achieve anything we put our mind to," said Michael McHugh, a St. Paul construction-company consultant and single-parent minority kid who arrived in 1992. "First, we had to behave and listen and do our homework."
A working-class son of north Minneapolis, Collins earned degrees in music and education at St. Mary's University of Minnesota. At St. Mary's he joined the teaching order of Christian Brothers. He returned to teach at DeLaSalle in 1959 and subsequently served as an educator and administrator at Shanley High School in Fargo; St. Mary's College High School in Berkeley, Calif., and Cretin-Derham Hall in St. Paul. He earned a doctorate in education from the University of San Francisco in 1990.