Julie Anne Hendrick, 54, died on Saturday, May 2, 2020, at her home in Bellefonte, Pennsylvania. She was born on March 22, 1966 in Livermore, California, to George and Dianna (Cummings) Hunt.
Julie grew up in Central Point, Oregon, graduating from Crater High School in 1984. After high school she attended Southern Oregon State College followed by Oregon State University where she received a Bachelor's Degree in Elementary Education. In 1995, Julie graduated from the University of Arizona with a Master of Science in Speech-Language Pathology.
Following her graduate degree, Julie worked as a speech pathologist at elementary schools within the Alexandria City School District (1995-1999), the Fairfax County School District (2001-2006), both in Northern Virginia, and the Amphitheater School District (2006-2015) in Tucson, Arizona. She loved her work, dedicating herself to the well being of her students, and building many lasting relationships with valued colleagues.
Julie married Angus Hendrick in 1990 in Portland, Oregon. The marriage ceremony, which took place before the Justice of the Peace, was celebrated for 30 years (though sometimes on the wrong day). Following the birth of their children: Haley in 1996, and Angus in 1998, Julie was a dedicated mother. She took a break from full-time work from 1999-2001 to take trips into DC with her children, pulling them in a wagon to see the museums and monuments. The family moved to Tucson in 2006 in support of her husband's education, and Julie raised her teenage children alone in Tucson from 2012-2015, when he returned to work on the east coast.
Julie enjoyed music, gardening, watching soccer, sewing, drawing, knitting, painting, collage, and a thousand other things she would collectively call crafting. Julie also enjoyed traveling, and took a number of road trips around the United States and Canada. Her first trip to Europe came in 2007. Traveling alone, she took planes, trains, and automobiles into rural Italy, where she did not speak the language. After seeing both children safely into college, she reunited with her husband in Bellefonte, Pennsylvania, in 2015.
Following a return trip to Italy with her family for Christmas, 2015, Julie began suffering from unexplained symptoms that were eventually diagnosed as a malignant brain tumor. Treatment and recovery followed, as well as many more trips to favorite places old and new, including London, DC, Disneyland (where she ran a half marathon), Tucson, Dayton (Tennessee, where she saw the total eclipse), Paris, Death Valley, Portland, Hawaii, and Australia.
After three-and-a-half years the tumor unexpectedly recurred in November 2019. Another round of surgery and a clinical trial chemotherapy were followed by another trip, this time to Belize at the end of the protracted Pennsylvania winter and beginning of the COVID-19 epidemic. Scans upon her return showed continued tumor growth. Following additional surgery and chemotherapy, she began a steady decline.
Throughout her battle with cancer, Julie was supported by the love of friends and family far and near. She is survived by her husband, Angus, and her children, Haley and Angus, of Bellefonte, Pennsylvania; her parents George and Dianna of Pleasant Gap, Pennsylvania; her brother Greg (spouse Dick) of Walnut Creek, California; her sister Leslee, of Portland, Oregon. She is also remembered by her aunts Susan and Julie, and their children and grandchildren, in a large and loving extended family.
No service is planned, owing to the quarantine. An event will be planned at a future time in celebration of Julie's life. Eventual burial will be at Jacksonville Cemetery, near her sister Lorrie, who died as an infant before Julie's birth. In lieu of flowers the family requests memorial donations be made to the Faith Centre in Bellefonte. Condolences may be left as comments, or sent via email.