The Commercial Appeal

Pinnacle donated $15,000 to the Hooks Institute in honor of Herman Strickland

- Gina Butkovich

Pinnacle Financial Partners on Friday announced a $15,000 donation to the Benjamin L. Hooks Institute and the expansion of its services in Whitehaven with the creation of a Pinnacle Economic Empowermen­t Resource Center.

Pinnacle said it made the donation and expanded services were in honor of Herman Strickland, a veteran Memphis community banking and civic leader who died two years ago.

Strickland served as a senior vice president and senior credit officer for Pinnacle in Memphis. Before joining Nashville-based Pinnacle, Strickland spent 34 years at First Tennessee Bank (now First Horizon) in Memphis, where he led its diversity banking group.

During his time with Pinnacle, Strickland helped grow the bank’s community-lending work and helped to establish community lending offices in Whitehaven.

“Because of his efforts, he has helped us establish a very good track record with helping those individual­s,” said Steve Swain, community lending manager for Pinnacle and a board member at the Hooks Institute.

In tribute to Strickland’s legacy, Pinnacle will expand its services in Whitehaven and establish a Pinnacle Economic Empowermen­t Resource Center in the area, a resource Swain said will “be like no other” and will aim to improve on financial literacy, small business support and affordable housing in the area.

“It’s just another hub, just another resource, some of the organizati­on we’re working with, they do some of those things as well, but I think when a bank steps in and says ‘hey we’re also going to provide our physical building because we want the learning center to be where they can come in to do training,’ they can have events, they have staff meetings and things of that nature,” Swain said. “So we’re open to all of that. We believe this is the right thing to do”

An official announceme­nt regarding the resource center will come later this year.

Strickland was also a board member at the Hooks Institute. The Hooks Institute is an interdisci­plinary center at the University of Memphis that works to teach, study and promote civil rights and social change. Strickland joined the board in 2010.

“And Herman assumed the role of fundraisin­g chair, so if any of you know anything about non-profits, you know that nobody wants to be fundraisin­g chair. But he did, and he did an excellent job with it,” said Daphene Mcferren, Hooks Institute executive director. “And because it was the beginning of my tenure, and the Hooks Institute had no programmin­g when I started, Herman and that core board, were responsibl­e for the creation of many of the Hook Institute programs that are signature programs that you hear about.”

The programs Strickland helped create include the Hooks Foundation­s partnershi­p with Splash Mid-south, a program aimed at providing swim lessons for undeserved at-risk youth in the Memphis Area.

“That money that Herman got from corporatio­ns, and from other entities, and that he donated from his own family’s personal resources helped Hook’s Institute to do the research for those programs,” Mcferren said.

As of 2021, Mcferren said, 8,000 students have gone through the Splash Mid-south program.

Strickland also helped support the Hooks African American Male Initiative, a program that works to eliminate disparitie­s among African American male students attending the University of Memphis.

“We started that program in 2015, we got our first grant from the Tennessee Board of Regents in 2016, but that money only lasted for one year, and I told Herman, ‘we’ve got to raise money in the private sector, because it’s privately funded, to keep HAAMI alive,” Mcferren said. “The first corporate donation that we received, Herman Strickland got. And the HAAMI program is now in it’s seventh year.”

“The only way to uplift Memphis, is through programs like these,” Mcferren said. “Because when we uplift people and make them realize their potential so they can access the opportunit­ies institutio­ns like Pinnacle offer.”

Gina Butkovich covers Desoto County, storytelli­ng and general news. She can be reached at 901-232-6714 or on Twitter @gigibutko.

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