Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

They were just 19 when they married 60 years ago

- KIMBERLY DISHONGH If you have an interestin­g howwe-met story or if you know someone who does, please call (501) 425-7228 or email: kdishongh@adgnewsroo­m.com

Robert McDaniel and Nancy Stricklin went for a swim on their first date, and just over four months later they took the plunge.

Their first date was on Aug. 12, 1962. They married Dec. 28, 1962.

Nancy lived in Harrisburg until she was 9 years old, when her father put the family on a train bound for California, where he had a job waiting at an aluminum factory. He died a few years later, though, and after Nancy finished high school her mother sent her to North Little Rock to live with relatives while she settled the family’s affairs and prepared to move back herself.

Robert’s friend Marian saw Nancy sitting at a bus stop soon after she arrived back in Arkansas. Marian stopped to ask if Nancy would like a ride. Nancy said yes, and they soon became good friends.

Robert, who grew up in Morgan, had worked for Marian’s father, who was involved in local politics, and had gone to school with Marian from first grade through their senior year.

“She had a car and I didn’t have one,” he says of Marian. “I used to ride home with her from time to time.”

He saw Marian at a get-together, and she asked him if he would like to meet someone.

“I said yes,” he says. “And she introduced me to Nancy.”

Their first date was at Lake Nixon, where there was music and swimming.

“We didn’t dance because I didn’t know how to dance, honestly,” Robert says. “We just went out there and went swimming and listened to music and so forth.”

Nancy remembers feeling at ease on that first date.

“Robert was real easy to talk to,” she says. “That was the thing that impressed me because I was real shy, more of an introvert. We had a good time that afternoon. It was a fun day.”

They went to eat at a drive-in after swimming, and after that they saw each other as often as they could.

Sometimes they took Nancy’s aunt to Petit Jean Mountain for picnics.

Interstate 40 was under constructi­on then, and they rode horses that belonged to Robert’s friend together along its path on occasion.

“We would ride horseback from Morgan, where I lived, down to Crystal Hill and back,” he says. “I-40 was just being built and it was just dirt work, not pavement.”

He surprised her when he proposed at the home where he was living with his parents.

“And later, I’ve been surprised that I was so quick to say yes,” she says with a laugh. “We were so young and naive, both of us.”

They were both 20 when they married at Levy Methodist Church in North Little Rock.

“We were paying for it ourselves. It was a very, very small wedding,” he says. “Our families helped do things.”

Marian, the friend who introduced them, was their maid of honor.

Robert realized before the ceremony that he had left their marriage license in the apartment they would share.

“[The wedding officiant] knew I had them, so he told me, ‘Well, I’m going to go ahead with this but as soon as this is over you have to go get them and bring them to me,’” Robert says of the officiant.

Nancy was blissfully unaware of that snafu.

“I didn’t know anything about it until it was all over,” she says.

Robert worked for Southern Farmers Associatio­n, an agricultur­al cooperativ­e in North Little Rock, when they married and Nancy worked for a Little Rock insurance company.

In 1965, Robert became a pastor. He had gone to one year of college after high school, and his preacher at Park Avenue Baptist Church encouraged him to go back and finish. He and Nancy moved to Arkadelphi­a so he could attend Ouachita Baptist University, and then to Fort Worth where he continued his education at Southweste­rn Baptist Theologica­l Seminary.

He pastored two churches in Texas, and in 1973 they returned to Arkansas so he could lead a church in Bradley. They moved around the state over the years, until 2008, when he retired from pastoring Baptist churches full time. Nancy worked as a legal secretary for several years.

Robert and Nancy didn’t take a honeymoon as newlyweds because they were young and money was tight. They have traveled extensivel­y since then, though — four times to Israel, and in 2000 to Oberammerg­au, Germany, to see the “Passion Play.”

The McDaniels live in Conway. He is pastor of a small church in Russellvil­le.

They have two sons and two daughters — Robert McDaniel II of Conway; David McDaniel of Shamrock, Texas; Amanda McDaniel of Jenks, Okla.; and Sarah Galloway of North Little Rock. They also have 10 grandchild­ren and two great-grandchild­ren with two more on the way.

“At times it does not feel that long, but it’s been our entire adult life and so it feels like it’s been a long, long time,” Nancy says of their almost 60 years of marriage. “It seems like it’s sure gone by in a hurry, especially when I think that now our kids are grandparen­ts. It’s just a blur when you think about all the things that have happened.”

 ?? (Special to the Democrat-Gazette) ?? Robert and Nancy McDaniel will have been married for 60 years on Dec. 28. Their first date was about four months before they exchanged their vows, which was just a couple of weeks before Nancy’s 20th birthday. “I went and bought her a charm bracelet for her birthday,” he says. “She still has it.”
(Special to the Democrat-Gazette) Robert and Nancy McDaniel will have been married for 60 years on Dec. 28. Their first date was about four months before they exchanged their vows, which was just a couple of weeks before Nancy’s 20th birthday. “I went and bought her a charm bracelet for her birthday,” he says. “She still has it.”
 ?? (Special to the Democrat-Gazette) ?? Nancy Stricklin and Robert McDaniel exchanged their marriage vows on Dec. 28, 1962. They have been together since they were 19 years old, almost their entire adult lives. “We made a commitment, not just between the two of us but before God, and we were just determined not to give up,” Nancy says. “It’s been good.”
(Special to the Democrat-Gazette) Nancy Stricklin and Robert McDaniel exchanged their marriage vows on Dec. 28, 1962. They have been together since they were 19 years old, almost their entire adult lives. “We made a commitment, not just between the two of us but before God, and we were just determined not to give up,” Nancy says. “It’s been good.”

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