There’s no doubt that Patricia ‘Miss Pat’ Chin, co-founder, and president of VP Records, has played an influential role in helping Jamaica’s unique music reach the global stage.

Miss Pat immeasurable contribution to reggae was honored recently at the UBS stadium in Long Island, where she accepted York College’s first-ever Presidential Medal from President Dr. Berenecea Johnson Eanes.

Her history is storied and indicative of a time when immigrants to the US ensured that they would be successful after choosing a new home. In the 1950s, Vincent and Patricia Chin got their start at Randy’s Record Mart by reselling used records out of their shop at 36 East Street in Kingston, Jamaica.

Miss Pat and her husband would go on to become two of the first people to produce, manufacture, and sell local artists to Jamaican audiences, including artists like John Holt, Alton Ellis, and Lord Creator.

At the start of the business, Vincent worked for Isaac Issa, stocking new records into jukeboxes and gathering the records he took out. This was the humble start to what would grow into one of the world’s most successful and largest reggae record companies.