Norma Lea Beasley was born in a tiny home in Springdale, Ark., and then created one of the biggest women-owned companies in Dallas.
In 1965 the year 1965, Mrs. Beasley and her late business partner, Jean Walker, founded Trinity Abstract & Title Co. in Waxahachie. The two women grew their business into several title firms, as well as Safeco Land Title of Dallas, which boasted greater than $1.6 million of annual revenue at the time they sold it in 2001.
The deceased, Ms. Beasley, 80, passed away on March 29 due to unnatural causes at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Dallas.
On Tuesday at Lovers Lane United Methodist Church, a funeral will be held at 1.30 p.m… She will be laid to rest in her hometown of Arkansas.
The actress. Beasley was also active in various social, civic, and business activities. She was a tireless worker who was continually operating professionally, as stated by her lawyer, LiaRardin.
“During the 1980s, when the title industry was at its peak -there were plenty of title firms and fee lawyers who made a profit and violated laws,” Ms. Rardin stated. “Norma’s firms never did this. She would not do that.”
Her business philosophy has led to trust.
“You always knew that she would not cheat to your advantage. She wasn’t going to cheat on the opposite partner,” Ms. Rardin stated.
Madame. Beasley grew up in her parent’s 20-acre apple orchard in Arkansas. She missed several grades in public school levels and enrolled in the University of Arkansas when she was 16.
A few more years after, she was accepted into law school at the university, where she continued to study as she continued to feed the hogs every day on the farm her family.
The 21-year-old was turning 21 at the time she graduated from law school. She was the youngest student and the only female in the University of Arkansas class of 1953, Mrs. Rardin said.
Mrs. Beasley worked briefly in Arkansas before moving to Dallas and later worked at a title company.
The two of them. Walker met and started purchasing, renovating, and renting out houses. They did a lot of their work, such as painting, roofing, and installing flooring Ms. Rardin said.
Madame. Beasley suggested they start an entity that handles land titles for communities that aren’t in the Dallas region. They began researching their data if competitors refused to offer the required information on land titles.
In the evening — after they had completed their full-time work during the day and at weekends, the women would use notecards to design the title plant of Waxahachie the city, Mrs. Rardin said. It took them five years to complete the project.
She was a professor at the University of Texas. Beasley also taught real estate and law courses at SMU’s downtown campus. She also assisted in helping to establish similar programs in the Dallas County Community College District.
She was a member of the board for several organizations that, included those of the Texas Health Presbyterian Foundation, Oaks Bank & Trust, the Dallas Citizens Council, Junior Achievement of Dallas, and the women’s advisory committee at Dallas Baptist University.
“Norma had a lot of fun with Girls Inc. and CREW, which is the Commercial Real Estate Women. She was a founding member,” Mrs. Rardin stated.
Her achievements include being inducted into the Texas Women’s Hall of Fame. The hall that welcomes students at the University of Arkansas School of Law is named after her.