Reel Life

Anastasia Patterson, a rising star in the US angling scene, finds her bliss in the serene waters of Lake Marion at sunset.

Anastasia Patterson’s happy place is on the water, especially if it’s an early autumn sunset on Lake Marion near her home in Sumter, S.C. (Photo by Milton Morris)

She’s one of the top up-and-coming anglers in the US

Anastasia Pattersonโ€™s happy place is on the water, especially during one of those early-autumn, cotton candy sunsets on Lake Marion with a jig hugging a water-logged cypress waiting for a bigmouth bass to strike.

โ€œI really donโ€™t know myself without fishing,โ€ says the Sumter, S.C., native whose Southern drawl is as smooth as one of her casts. โ€œIf I didnโ€™t have fishing, Iโ€™m not sure what Iโ€™d be doing, other than a whole lot of hunting. From a young age, I was out on the water. My first love was not a boy. It was fishing.โ€

Patterson got that love of fishing from her father, Wendell, an avid outdoorsman who would bring her along on duck hunts and put her in a deer stand. Her confidence comes from her mother, Patty Jaye, who was the first black woman to serve as the City of Sumterโ€™s chief of police, a position she held for 10 years.

For many of her first 19 years, Patterson balanced being โ€œjust one of the boysโ€ with competing in beauty pageants. 

โ€œOne time, I killed a deer in the morning and then had to go straight into hair and makeup,โ€ she recalls. โ€œMy dad is like, โ€˜If you kill it, you have to clean it.โ€™ He had the deer hanging for me in the freezer when I got home from the pageant.โ€

Patterson is not afraid to step out of her comfort zone and compete in a male-dominated sport. 

โ€œItโ€™s intimidating a little bit at times,โ€ Patterson says. โ€œBut just because you donโ€™t see people like you doing it or women doing it doesnโ€™t mean that it canโ€™t be done. Donโ€™t let the voices of other people stop you from your full potential. You may be just one day away from your one big thing.โ€

Itโ€™s her goal to compete at the highest levelโ€”Bassmasterโ€™s Elite competitionโ€”but sheโ€™s also fine with wherever the Lord takes her in life.

โ€œI just really enjoy fishing,โ€ she says. โ€œTen years from now? Hopefully Iโ€™m married and a mom out there fishing with my kid strapped to the back of my bass boat. But I really donโ€™t know. Ten years ago, I didnโ€™t think my life would be where it is right now.โ€


Getting to know Anastasia Patterson

Birthday: March 19, 1996

Hometown: Sumter, S.C.

Claim to fame:ย Sheโ€™s one of the top up-and-coming female anglers in the U.S. and was featured on the cover ofย Bassmasterย magazineโ€™s October 2022 issue.

Founding member:ย She helped start the fishing team at Presbyterian College in Clinton, S.C., and soon after won a college tournament. โ€œThatโ€™s when I saw that this was something I could do for the rest of my life.โ€

Biggest catch: A 12-pound-plus bass that she pulled from a lake in Florida. 

Not just fishing: When sheโ€™s not competing in up to 60 tournaments a year, Patterson works as an event planner and makes jewelry. โ€œYou make every minute of every day count,โ€ she says.

Co-op connection: She and her family are members of Black River Electric Cooperative.


Editor’s Note: A version of this SC Stories profile was featured in the February 2024 issue of South Carolina Living, a magazine that is distributed 11 times a year to more than 1 million South Carolinians by The Electric Cooperatives of South Caroline.