
ECU Mourns the Passing of Hall of Fame Coach Catherine Bolton
November 25, 2025 | General, Women's Basketball
GREENVILLE, N.C. - East Carolina Hall of Fame coach Catherine Bolton passed away on Nov. 21, 2025. She was 86.
One of the most influential figures in the history and development of women's sports at East Carolina, Bolton served as the first head coach for the women's basketball program from 1969 to 1978. Under her guidance, the team finished with a winning record eight times with over 100 wins, winning over two-thirds of their games.
The 1972-73 season under Bolton's leadership was one to remember. The Pirates went undefeated in the regular season that year, going a perfect 12 for 12 before extending their winning streak to 18 in a row in tournament play. The team won the North Carolina AIAW Championship and the AIAW Region II Championship before finally falling for the first time in the national tournament before finishing with a 19-2 overall record.
Bolton had her hand in the mentoring of multiple ECU Hall of Fame athletes in her time leading the women's basketball program as she recruited and coached Pirate greats such as Sheilah Cotten, Debbie Freeman and Rosie Thompson.
An overachieving giant of ECU Athletics in the grandest sense of the term, in addition to her duties as a professor and leading the women's basketball program, Bolton also served as the head coach of ECU's field hockey, gymnastics, tennis and volleyball programs during periods spanning from the end of the 1960s through the latter part of the 1970s.
Bolton was inducted into the East Carolina Athletics Hall of Fame in 1992.
From Bolton's Obituary:
Catherine's greatest passion in life was the NC Senior Games Program. She was a member of the team that developed the NC program, beginning in 1984. With her background in Health and Physical Education, Catherine played a key role in determining the first sports to include and developing the first NC Senior Games Rules Book. Catherine was the NCSG Event Director as well as the Greenville-Pitt County Events Director for over 30 years. In this role, she traveled across the state with the NCSG Team, training local event managers and providing clinics for participants. When she became 55 years of age, Catherine also became a participant competing in golf on the local, state, and national levels. In addition to her service with the Senior Games Program, she was also instrumental in establishing the Special Olympics – Pitt County program as well as assisting other counties throughout Eastern North Carolina.
In addition to her parents, Catherine was preceded in death by her brothers, James Bolton and Charles Bolton.
She is survived by a number of extended family members and a great number of former students and athletes whose lives she touched.
One of the most influential figures in the history and development of women's sports at East Carolina, Bolton served as the first head coach for the women's basketball program from 1969 to 1978. Under her guidance, the team finished with a winning record eight times with over 100 wins, winning over two-thirds of their games.
The 1972-73 season under Bolton's leadership was one to remember. The Pirates went undefeated in the regular season that year, going a perfect 12 for 12 before extending their winning streak to 18 in a row in tournament play. The team won the North Carolina AIAW Championship and the AIAW Region II Championship before finally falling for the first time in the national tournament before finishing with a 19-2 overall record.
Bolton had her hand in the mentoring of multiple ECU Hall of Fame athletes in her time leading the women's basketball program as she recruited and coached Pirate greats such as Sheilah Cotten, Debbie Freeman and Rosie Thompson.
An overachieving giant of ECU Athletics in the grandest sense of the term, in addition to her duties as a professor and leading the women's basketball program, Bolton also served as the head coach of ECU's field hockey, gymnastics, tennis and volleyball programs during periods spanning from the end of the 1960s through the latter part of the 1970s.
Bolton was inducted into the East Carolina Athletics Hall of Fame in 1992.
From Bolton's Obituary:
Catherine's greatest passion in life was the NC Senior Games Program. She was a member of the team that developed the NC program, beginning in 1984. With her background in Health and Physical Education, Catherine played a key role in determining the first sports to include and developing the first NC Senior Games Rules Book. Catherine was the NCSG Event Director as well as the Greenville-Pitt County Events Director for over 30 years. In this role, she traveled across the state with the NCSG Team, training local event managers and providing clinics for participants. When she became 55 years of age, Catherine also became a participant competing in golf on the local, state, and national levels. In addition to her service with the Senior Games Program, she was also instrumental in establishing the Special Olympics – Pitt County program as well as assisting other counties throughout Eastern North Carolina.
In addition to her parents, Catherine was preceded in death by her brothers, James Bolton and Charles Bolton.
She is survived by a number of extended family members and a great number of former students and athletes whose lives she touched.
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