Michael Patrick Colivet was born at 11 Windmill street in Limerick city. His father, John Colivet, was a Sea Captain from Jersey, and his mother Anne Kinnerk was from Askeaton, County Limerick. Michael spent most of his formative years in Limerick. At age 12 his family moved to The Claddagh in Galway and he attended secondary school at St. Joseph's Patrician College in Galway. The family lived in Galway until 1903 before returning to settle in Limerick.
Political career
Colivet was Commandant of the Irish Volunteers for Limerick City and East Clare, and led the 1916 Easter Rising in Limerick. He was later arrested and jailed for his part in the Rising. In 1918 he was voted on to the Council for Limerick Corporation while he was jailed in Lincoln prison. Mayor O'Mara stated that the action was "a protest against the way Irishmen had been treated by the Government, who were filling the gaols with men who had the courage of their convictions". He remained an Alderman on the City Municipal until 1925. His cellmate at Lincoln prison was Éamon de Valera. De Valera, aided by Michael Collins and Harry Boland, famously escaped from Lincoln prison in 1919 with the help of a key made by Peter De Loughry.
Election to the First Dáil
He was elected as a Sinn Féin MP for the Limerick City constituency at the 1918 general election. In January 1919, Sinn Féin MPs refused to recognise the Parliament of the United Kingdom and instead assembled at the Mansion House in Dublin as a revolutionary parliament called Dáil Éireann. At the official roll call, Colivet was marked "fé ghlas ag Gallaibh". Like many other elected Irish MPs he was interned in a British prison at the time. On 14 April 1921 his treatment at Rathkeale prison was debated in the House of Commons - MPs questioned his cell conditions and if it was appropriate to carry around an elected MP, who was awaiting trail, as a hostage on British Army trucks. English journalist Wilfrid Ewart gives an interesting account of Ireland at that time, including a visit to Rathkeale prison and a meeting with Colivet, who was interned there in April 1921.
He was re-elected unopposed at the 1921 elections for the Limerick City–Limerick East constituency. He opposed the Anglo-Irish Treaty and voted against it, stating in the Dáil debate: He was again re-elected unopposed at the 1922 general election as an anti-Treaty Sinn Féin Teachta Dála but did not take his seat in the Dáil as he did not recognise the legitimacy of the Third Dáil. He lost his seat at the 1923 general election. In the Limerick Municipal elections of 1925, he stood for the Republican party in the Abbey and Castle Wards and was elected as a Councillor. In 1926, many Anti-Treaty republicans decided to resume constitutional politics and founded the Fianna Fáil party. In 1927 they took the Oath of Allegiance and entered the Dáil. Colivet did not join Fianna Fáil as he refused to take the Oath of Allegiance, and soon after he retired from political life.
Post-political life
He continued his work in Limerick as manager of the Shannon Foundry. He later moved to Dublin when he was appointed to the Civil Service as General Inspector of Housing in the Department of Local Government. He was Chairman of the National Housing Board and the Dublin Housing Committee of Inquiry. The latter produced an influential report recommending the clearing of city slums in Dublin. In later life he supported Clann na Poblachta for a time, as an alternative Republican party to Fianna Fáil. However he was disillusioned when they went into power with Fine Gael after the 1948 general election.
Remembrance
Michael Patrick Colivet was buried at Mount Jerome Cemetery in 1955. Many TDs were in attendance at his funeral including Éamon de Valera, Donogh O'Malley, Dan Breen and John Joe Sheehy. As reported in the Limerick Leader, a number of his close friends were killed in the struggle for independence, including George Clancy and Michael O'Callaghan. His first wife died while he was imprisoned on Spike Island; he was denied release to attend the funeral. The paper also reported that Colivet fought on the Republican side during the Civil War, but "at no time did he entertain a feeling of bitterness to those who differed from him, and nothing caused him more sadness than the sundering of the grand bond of Irish unity". Colivet Drive in Limerick city is named in his honour. In 2009, his son, Brian Colivet, donated Michael Colivet's volunteer uniform, and a number of other artefacts to the Limerick Museum in Limerick city.