• Date Of Birth: April 27, 1928
  • Date Of Death: March 11, 2022
  • State: Arkansas

Dorothy Florene Parker Porterfield died on March 11, 2022 in Nashville, Arkansas.  Mrs. Dot, as she was known in the Nashville area, was born on April 27, 1928 in Corinth, Mississippi.  She was the fifth child of David Allen (D.A.) Parker and Leacy Alene Bell Parker.

The Parker family moved to Arkansas where she met William Dexter (W.D.) Porterfield in Blevins Schools.  They were married on January 30, 1947.

She was barely seventeen and the oldest at home when her mother died leaving behind seven siblings including a two-week-old baby. She took care of the family while attending high school.

Mrs. Dot lived and worked in and around Nashville for all of her married life and continued to live in Nashville after her husband died in 2006.  She was one of the three founders of Howard County Children and Adult Center (HCCC) which celebrated its 50th anniversary in October, 2021. When working with young children as a teacher’s aide for several years, the children could not say Mrs. Porterfield so they called her Mrs. Dot at her suggestion.

She was proceeded in death by her parents; husband; brothers: Leon Parker, Alton Earl Parker, Arnold Lee Parker, and Levon Parker; sisters: Opal Folsom, Ivanell Yates, Jewel Bell, Evelyn Wilbanks, and Betty Henson; and step-mother, Polly Dancer Parker.

She is survived by two daughters: Sharon Kay Bland (Ken) of Little Rock, Marcia Lynn Riley of Nashville; one son: William Don Porterfield of Nashville; two grandsons: Andrew Riley (Tarren) of Sterling, Colorado, Benjamin Riley (Sujeong) of Daegu, South Korea; and one great grandson, Ian Wilson Riley of Sterling, Colorado.

Two surviving sisters are Laveda Driskill of Fairfield, California and Paulette Whirley of Iuka, Mississippi. Half-brother, David Stanley Parker (Enita) of Tupelo, Mississippi and half-sister, Patricia Gail Stricklin (Roy) of Corinth, Mississippi are survivors. She is also survived by numerous nieces and nephews.

The family requests that face masks be worn for the indoor service.

The family wishes to thank Dr. Bertrand Fonji and Dr.

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