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Julia Kathryn Haney Strickland - Junior League of Little Rock

Julia Kathryn Haney Strickland - Junior League of Little Rock

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The Gaines House event was so successful that <strong>Strickland</strong> and the board set out to create a similarexperience on a larger scale with the rest <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Junior</strong> <strong>League</strong> membership at the Arkansas School forthe Blind in May 2010.The school, like Gaines House, has ties to the <strong>Junior</strong> <strong>League</strong>. In the 1960s, <strong>League</strong> members learnedBraille and translated textbooks to Braille for students.One <strong>of</strong> the strategies is inspir-ing evangelists for a cause. <strong>Strickland</strong>’s plan was having <strong>Junior</strong> <strong>League</strong>members see firsthand some <strong>of</strong> the people who benefit from the <strong>League</strong>’s work so they would beinspired to work harder to get others involved.“They walked into this not really having a game plan down because they didn’t know what they weregoing to do until they got there that night,” <strong>Strickland</strong> says. “They thought we were going to have aPowerPoint presentation. So it was a surprise to the <strong>Junior</strong> <strong>League</strong> members who were there, and theyhad to have flexibility and they had to do this project without a lot <strong>of</strong> planning in the beginning.”Tisha Gribble, the <strong>League</strong>’s president-elect, took part in the activities at Gaines House and theArkansas School for the Blind.“We got to sort <strong>of</strong> interact with those women in a way that probably wouldn’t happen otherwise,”Gribble says <strong>of</strong> their trip to Gaines House.Of the school work, she says, “It was kind <strong>of</strong> a new twist on our training. We’ve never done anythinglike it in a training capacity. Our projects are hands-on with all sorts <strong>of</strong> individuals, but in the beginning<strong>of</strong> the year we’ve never had an opportunity to do that as chairs and chair-elects. Our training is usuallymore <strong>of</strong> an orientation and this was more <strong>of</strong> a handson activity that allowed us to work with these cutekids. It pulled at your heartstrings.”Gribble has gotten to know <strong>Strickland</strong> over the last couple <strong>of</strong> years as they worked and traveledtogether.“It was sort <strong>of</strong> like baptism by fire. She was already president-elect, and I was president-elect-elect,”Gribble says. “She hadn’t taken <strong>of</strong>fice yet so she was trying to learn the ropes. That was a fun time. Ididn’t know her very well then - it’s kind <strong>of</strong> funny, you get thrown together and you’re sharing a roomand a bathroom. You get to know each other fast.” KENTUCKY BABY<strong>Strickland</strong> was born in Murray, Ky., but moved to Springdale when she was about a year old so herfather could attend law school at the University <strong>of</strong> Arkansas at Fayetteville.Her father, Roger <strong>Haney</strong>, Washington County treasurer, and her mother, Mary, a retired teacher, live inFayetteville. She and her younger brother, Steven, a police <strong>of</strong>ficer in that city, spent some time everysummer as children staying with theirgrandparents in Kentucky. Their grandfather was a retired teacherand counselor turned tobacco farmer and <strong>Strickland</strong> helped with tasks like topping and suckeringtobacco on those trips.“So, I know how to grow tobacco. That skill and knowledge has never come into play in anything inmy career,” she says with a smile.<strong>Strickland</strong> got her bachelor <strong>of</strong> science business administration degree in accounting from the UA in1991, and moved to <strong>Little</strong> <strong>Rock</strong> soon after to work for what was then the Peat Marwick accountingfirm. Since 2002, she has been business manager at Cross Gunter Witherspoon and Galchus.“It is amazing how <strong>Julia</strong> can balance the demands and long hours <strong>of</strong> family, civic and pr<strong>of</strong>essionalwork,” says lawyer Rick Roderick, <strong>Strickland</strong>’s boss. “She is one <strong>of</strong> the most dedicated andconscientious individuals I have ever met. She sets high standards and is relentless in achieving thosestandards in anything she does. I’ve worked with a lot <strong>of</strong> very successful people in my life and she isright up there with the best <strong>of</strong> them. <strong>Julia</strong> is a success story, an amazing person.”She and her husband, Reese, met in college and married in 1995. They have three children - 11-yearoldKatie, 8-year-old Will and 6-yearold Erin.

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