October 6, 2025

Building Community Through Service: The Woman’s Club of Clayton with President Trish Perna

Transcription

Jonathan Breeden: [00:00:00] On this week’s episode of The Best of Johnston County Podcast. Our guest was Trish Perna, the president of the Women’s Club of Clayton, North Carolina. We talked to Trish about her journey to Johnston County and what brought her to Johnston County, which was her Grand Gyms, as she talked about, who are settled in the Fayetteville Hope Mills area.

We talked to her a little bit about the history of the Women’s Club of Johnston County. A lot of the different community service projects they do and what they do with the money they raise, and that anybody that is a woman over the age of 18 can be a member. You do not have to be 70 years old, and you don’t have to be rich to be a member of the Women’s Club of Clayton.

So if you’re interested in community service and the things that the Women’s Club is involved in, listen in.

Welcome to another episode of Best of Johnston County, brought to you by Breeden Law Office. Our host, Jonathan Breeden, an experienced family lawyer with a deep connection to the community, is ready to take you on a journey through the area that he has called home for over 20 [00:01:00] years. Whether it’s a deep dive into the love locals have for the county or unraveling the complexities of family law, Best of Johnston County presents an authentic slice of this unique community.

Jonathan Breeden: Hello and welcome to another edition of The Best of Johnston County Podcast. I’m your host, Jonathan Breeden, and on today’s episode, we have the president of the Clayton Women’s Club or the Women’s Club of Clayton, depending on how you wanna say it. Trish Perna, she’s here to talk to us a little bit about her journey to Johnston County and her journey to Johnston County is similar to a lot of people’s journey to Johnston County. How she got involved in community service initially and what drew her to the Clayton Women’s Club, along with some of the activities of the Clayton Women’s Club and how you can get involved.

But before we get to that, I’d like you to like, follow and subscribe to this podcast wherever you’re seeing it, whether it be on Apple, Spotify, YouTube, TikTok, LinkedIn X, or any of the other social media channels of The Best of Johnston County Podcast. The Best of Johnston County Podcast comes out every single [00:02:00] Monday and has now for over almost two years. And it’s getting close. Our first episode came out in November of 2023, so we’re excited to continue to bring this to you. And if you’d also be so kind as to leave us a five star review down below, that would be great. The Best of Johnston County Podcast comes out every single Monday, and we’d like you to keep listing back and go back and listen to some of our previous episodes with the vast majority of the Johnston County Commissioners along with.

Congressman Brad Knott. We’ve had many great guests Donald O’Meara, realtor. We’ve had Adrian O’Neal, the County Parks Rec director on twice. So anyway, lot of great people have been on this podcast, so keep listing. We’ll have more great episodes coming in the future. If you know anybody who would like to be on this podcast, reach out to us on through our social media channels at Best of Johnston County.

Welcome, Trish.

Trisha Perna: Thank you.

Jonathan Breeden: That whole I

Trisha Perna: thank you for having me, Jonathan.

Jonathan Breeden: I know, I think I probably repeated myself in that intro. We batched record these like a lot of podcasters, right.

Trisha Perna: Okay.

Jonathan Breeden: So this is the [00:03:00] third one we were recorded today.

Trisha Perna: Okay.

Jonathan Breeden: And so sometimes the stuff starts to, to run together.

Trisha Perna: I was sitting here listening to you say all that stuff and I being, I wonder how long it actually took him to memorize all that.

Jonathan Breeden: Well, I, it took a lot of episodes, lemme tell you. But, but we’ve been doing it a while. And if you say the same thing over and over, you could, you could memorize it, right? Right.

So anyway, so tell the audience who you are and what you do.

Trisha Perna: Well, I’m Trish Perna. I’m the current president of the Women’s Club of Clayton, and I appreciate you having me on to, to tell people about the Women’s Club.

Jonathan Breeden: Well, it was good. We met initially at a J Now awards reception a few weeks ago where the Clayton Women’s Club is being, is the Women’s Club Clayton or Clayton Women’s Club?

Trisha Perna: It’s the Woman’s Club of Clayton. Okay. That’s our legal. Legal name.

Jonathan Breeden: I’m gonna get it wrong. I’m sorry.

Trisha Perna: It’s everybody does so right. As long as you, as long as you know where to bring.

Jonathan Breeden: Right. I got you. Yeah. Anyway where y’all are being recognized as one of the volunteer organizations of the year.

Yes.

Trisha Perna: We won nonprofit of the year, nonprofit in county. [00:04:00] That was, we were. We were really heartfelt over that. That was wonderful.

Jonathan Breeden: Well, it’s great that what the, the JDAL magazine and and J down L Media and all they do to recognize, that’s great because those awards recognize people that don’t win awards like nonprofits.

Trisha Perna: Right.

Jonathan Breeden: I always sponsor the firefighter of the year. Teenager of the year.

Trisha Perna: Mm-hmm.

Jonathan Breeden: Medical professional year. Like they just recognize people who, yeah. Police officer of the year, they don’t get recognized. So I, I’m, I’m a big fan of that and always glad to sponsor it and

Trisha Perna: it’s a good feel. Good.

Was happy to see your group win.

Jonathan Breeden: Good. Y’all had a great turnout for the, for the award. Yes. Thank you. You gave a nice speech up there. I know you’re, remember what I said? I know you’re not a big speech giver and all that stuff, but you know, it’s not like you stand up front 250 people every day, right?

No. Right. No, I know. It’s a lot.

Trisha Perna: 84 once a month. Right.

Jonathan Breeden: That’s for sure. So anyway so I mean. I mean, tell me a little bit about you. I mean, how, you know, where’d you grow up, where’d you work, what brought you to Johnston County?

Trisha Perna: So I [00:05:00] grew up on the river in Ohio. Well we talked about just south of Steubenville, if anybody knows where that’s at.

And I graduated high school from Buckeye North High School. And then as a young adult, I moved out to Las Vegas. I had family already out there, so I spent, most of my adult life so far out there until I moved here in 2019. So I spent out there at a, working for a plastic surgeon’s office, cosmetic plastic surgeon’s office.

She’s a private surgeon. We had the OR suite right there in the office. All the bells and whistles, 30 years of stories. So it was, I can’t, yeah, I cannot imagine.

Jonathan Breeden: A plastic surgery practice in Las Vegas. I mean, the things you must have seen in the book, you could write, but we won’t get into that on this podcast.

No, that’s a

Trisha Perna: total nother kind of podcast.

Jonathan Breeden: I cannot imagine. I mean, plastic surgery is one thing. Las Vegas is another. So you wanna talk about completely over the top. [00:06:00] You, you know what I mean? So, but I think you told me you moved here because you had a daughter and, and a son-in-law, son-in-law was in the military.

Yes. They were brought to Fort Bragg and they decided to put down roots here. And you wanted to follow the grandkids.

Trisha Perna: Yes, that’s exactly right. He is in the military, still in the military Special Forces. Now she’s a realtor down in Fayetteville Hope Mill area. And, yeah, they told us they weren’t coming back to the West coast, so we said, well then we gotta follow those little grand gems.

So that’s what we did.

Jonathan Breeden: Oh, well, hey, there’s, there’s nothing wrong with that. You’re not the first person to move to Johnston County to follow grand kids.

Trisha Perna: A lot of people I meet here, a lot of kids do the same thing.

Jonathan Breeden: They do. They do. Yeah. Hey, look, it’s a great place to live. I, I, you know, it is. The weather’s nice.

Taxes are low. It’s not too crowded. You know, whatever you need that we don’t have in Johnston County is available in Raleigh. Yeah. So, it’s a reason why the triangle is the number one place to live in America.

Trisha Perna: Mm-hmm.

Jonathan Breeden: and a lot of people move here every single day.

Trisha Perna: Yes.

Jonathan Breeden: So, so how did you get involved with community service in general. We’ll get to the women’s club in a minute, but I’m, I’m fairly certain this [00:07:00] was probably not your first community service involvement.

Trisha Perna: Actually, it was. Oh, it was Okay. Jonathan, actually it was all right. I, you know. Vegas busy working hard, working long hours, and then raising kids.

I never had time. Not that I didn’t want to, but I’d give my, you know, give my few bucks as I passed their fundraiser on, on the sidewalk or whatever. But when we decided to move here my husband and I were talking and we decided that I wouldn’t go back to work unless I ended up having to so I would be available for the Grand Gems.

So, and. But I get bored. I know me. So I said, well, you know, I think I wanna help give back to the community and figure out how to do some charity work. And I didn’t really know. So when I first moved here, then I was looking online and I found the town of Clayton, and then that led me to downtown development.

And so I volunteered for the tree lighting that year and that was a lot of fun. [00:08:00] But through that I ended up meeting Cheryl Champion. Do you know Cheryl Champion?

Jonathan Breeden: I know Cheryl Champion.

Trisha Perna: Her and I were on the Okay. I like everybody knows Cheryl Champion

Jonathan Breeden: champion. Her, her and I were on the GCA board together for like six or seven years.

Yes. Okay. She was running volleyball. Yes. And she is a great person.

Trisha Perna: She’s fantastic. She’s awesome. Fantastic. So I, I got partnered with her so she could show me the ropes and that’s, she started talking about the Woman’s Club of Clayton and that’s how I learned about it. So I went to a meeting and I liked it.

Went back to another meeting and I joined that day. So, and then through the last five years I just, I, you know, my turn to be president, so it’s your turn to be president. My turn. I got you.

Jonathan Breeden: So, well, I think people need to understand. The Women’s Club of Clayton is not a social club. It is a working club.

Trisha Perna: It is a working club.

We work hard, so we get a lot done.

Jonathan Breeden: yeah. I mean, I, I think you know, it’s not just sit around and have tea and stuff. I mean, they’re, they’re out there doing stuff in the community all the time. Yeah. And have the whole 25 years I’ve lived in Johnston

Trisha Perna: County. [00:09:00] Mm-hmm. Yes. Yeah. The, the, so the Women’s Club of Clayton actually started nearly twenties.

So we’ve been around for a long time and we’ve always been a working club, help the town. However, in fact, mayor McLeod right now tells people, if you want something done, talk to the Women’s Club of Clayton. So, so, and we’re proud of that.

Jonathan Breeden: Yeah. There’s, there’s no doubt about that. Well, so the Women’s Club of Clayton is, is part of a larger organization of, I guess, women’s clubs international.

Trisha Perna: Yeah, so General Federation of Women’s Clubs, it’s an international organization, and so they are our, what we consider our bigger support, our larger support, and then that filters down into GFWC NC so that there’s a state level and we’re a member of the state level as well.

Jonathan Breeden: Okay. And so what is the Mission of Women’s Club Internationals and the Mission of the Women’s Club of Clayton

Trisha Perna: Well, they’re pretty, they’re in line, which is one reason why we’re a member with them. [00:10:00] But, so you’ve got this, our club is broken into five sections, so they’re called CSP, Community Service Programs. So we’ve got environment, we’ve got arts and culture, we’ve got health and wellness, we’ve got civic engagement and outreach, and we have education and libraries.

So everything we do in the community, all of our projects, all of our fundraising money that goes out to the community and organizations all falls within one of those. And on the state level and the international level, it’s the same. And then of course, for the international and federal I’ll go with federal and state.

There’s a lot of legislative stuff that they influenced.

Jonathan Breeden: Well, and let’s talk about some of the, the many projects that the Women’s Club of Clayton does. They, you know, those of us have been around a long time. Remember some that have been done in the past that might be coming back.

Yeah. I remember the fashion show.

Trisha Perna: Mm-hmm.

Jonathan Breeden: You said it might be, you told me before we started recording, it might be coming back in the spring of [00:11:00] 26. Let’s talk about, were you there? You were there when they did the last fast year? It was like two or three years ago I think. I had

Trisha Perna: just joined. Okay. I had just joined with the last one that they did and, and they said it was fantastic.

I didn’t get to go, I was still learning the ropes. I didn’t, it was already in the right, it had already been planned and all that by the time I joined. But anyway, so, but they said that was fantastic. So if we do get to do it in the spring, I’m gonna be excited ’cause it’ll be my first one I get to experience, so.

Jonathan Breeden: Right. Well that’s great. I, I remember that. I remember. Community garden. They, they sort of started I know maybe you’re not as involved with it as you were, but just talk about what it is, where it is and who’s doing it now.

Trisha Perna: So it’s the community garden on Main Street there in Clayton, in downtown Clayton, and it’s owned by Thomas Lipscomb.

And he is very generous in letting people come in and, and use a box and grow vegetables. And, but through with our club, along with his help, we were able to turn the garden into a [00:12:00] Christmas. Per, not parade, but destination. So, and all the garden boxes were decorated with different Christmas themes and we had candy for the kids to come.

And we had, I think that first year we had 1100 people come. And then the second year, I think there was like 2,400 people that had come. There were people who had heard about it, came from Raleigh and even other states. They were here visiting family and saw it on the, you know, we listed on the free online listing.

So it was, it was quite popular.

Jonathan Breeden: I got you. Y’all still doing that now? Or is somebody doing it?

Trisha Perna: They’d still decorate it for Christmas. It’s not a big event that I’m aware of. The lady that was in charge of that in our club unfortunately passed away and it never got picked up really by anybody else. So we do we do still maintain a fairy garden.

That environment just built in there for little kids to come in and, and visit and play with. Right touch things.

Jonathan Breeden: So where is the Women’s [00:13:00] Club of Clayton? It has a building.

Trisha Perna: Yes. It’s on South Church Street. Okay. 1 0 9 South Church Street. It’s right across from the library in Clayton.

Jonathan Breeden: Okay. And right around sort of catty corner from Horn Horn United Methodist Church.

Trisha Perna: Yes. That’s exactly where it’s at. And,

Jonathan Breeden: and right down from the. New Town Hall, which was the old school.

Trisha Perna: Yes. Right. I just learned the story, the story about that the other day. Yes.

Jonathan Breeden: Yeah. So, so it’s, it’s right there. Mm-hmm. And now they’re gonna have this new, in the old town hall building, April Seas and them are gonna have these.

Popup shops type thing. These little vendor booth for small businesses. So that’s gonna be opening here in the next couple months. That’s gonna be exciting too. Mm-hmm. so I mean that, that’s great. So, so I mean, I’m just remembering the other events. Let’s talk about the events that are, that are going on now.

Taste of Carolina. Yes. The Taste of Carolina, which evolved, evolved from the sort of community gala. And then it sort of changed names, but same sort of concept. Talk about that, what it [00:14:00] is, how you raise money, when it might, the next one might be, well, I can tell you the next one’s gonna be on March 14th ’cause we’ve already secured the date.

Trisha Perna: That’s our big fundraiser for the year. So that’s what allows us to be able to go out into the community and do what we do. And at these events, there’s all restaurants, local restaurants come in and they set up and they’re our food servers and we get together and you can judge the food. They get to win awards just like we did at J now.

So we have different awards that we give. Usually there’s dancing, of course there’s some wine involved. Music. We always have a dj, Mike, you’ve probably heard of Mike. He’s fantastic and it’s just a great way for. Everybody to get fancy dance seated up and, and come, come help the women’s club, support the community.

So where is it

Jonathan Breeden: gonna be?

Trisha Perna: It’s always at, so far it’s always been at the farm at 42.

Jonathan Breeden: Farm. At 42? Mm-hmm. Okay.

Trisha Perna: Yeah.

Jonathan Breeden: I gotcha. And tickets include all you can eat, I think, right? It does. Yes, they do. [00:15:00] And how much were tickets last year? I know you might not have next year’s ticket prices. I think they

Trisha Perna: were 80.

Jonathan Breeden: 80. Okay. I think

Trisha Perna: so.

Jonathan Breeden: Alright, I gotcha. Does that include beer and wine?

Trisha Perna: No, that’s, it’s, that’s under the farm at 40 two’s liquor license. So that’s, that’s separate. So that’s cash I got, that’s cash bar.

Jonathan Breeden: I got you. So how many restaurants come and take part in Taste of Carolina

Trisha Perna: between 10 and 12?

Jonathan Breeden: Oh man, that’s great.

Trisha Perna: Oh, we have a great participant. The restaurants love it. So well, who

Jonathan Breeden: are some of the past participants?

Trisha Perna: Mannings Anthonys I’m gonna miss a bunch of people. I’m sorry.

Jonathan Breeden: Right. so, alright. So you don’t remember exactly all the different ones, but we all know Anthony’s LPIs.

We know Mannings it out in downtown Clayton. Yeah. They do a great job. Yeah. And I, I put on one of these. Taste of Carolina type events with the Cleveland Chamber of Commerce about 10 years ago, Uhhuh, and we had restaurants around the 40, 42 area and it was so much fun and it was so good. And Anthony was, was there.

Mm-hmm. I mean, he’s a tremendous community [00:16:00] person and, and was willing to do it. And we had, cleveland Draft House and you know, many, many Fiesta Mexicana and, and so many great local res. So there you’re your naming and your name most.

Trisha Perna: Yeah, we had many great restaurants, the ones that I couldn’t think of that came and did it for us.

Jonathan Breeden: Yeah. And it was a ton of fun. And of course we ate too much, but we were able to raise a fair amount of money for the Chambers, for the Chamber of Commerce, that, that was doing that. So, so that’s gonna be March 14th, 2026.

Trisha Perna: Right.

Jonathan Breeden: And that’s your biggest fundraiser and you can raise it as much as it’s,

Trisha Perna: we also have a silent auction there as well. So we last two years we’ve had big nutcrackers that we had donated to the silent auction.

Jonathan Breeden: Oh, that’s great.

Trisha Perna: Actually, another member of ours and my mom and her, her sweetie build ’em by hand and then. And so we put ’em into silent auction. People love them.

Jonathan Breeden: Oh, that’s awesome. Yeah. That’s awesome. And I mean, I mean, that event can raise, I mean, upwards of $30,000, I believe, right?

Trisha Perna: Mm-hmm.

Jonathan Breeden: Yes. And so where does the money, the women’s club raise, go to?

Trisha Perna: So an example [00:17:00] of, one of the things that it goes to is for this last year, Isaiah 117, of course, is building their new home down in Selma. And so we purchased a bedroom and a half bath for them and then also gave them some monies to use at their discretion. So that’s one of the things.

We also purchased four benches for the town of Clayton. They put one went to the greenway, one went, you know, they put ’em all over. And because there’s extra seating, we’re always hearing that people need extra seating around town. They have a lot of events downtown, so people need to be able to sit.

We also support Boys and Girls Club. We support House of Hope Harbor House. You know, a lot of organizations, we’ve partnered with One Compassion before to get stuff done. And we also support Her Haven of Light. Which I don’t know if you’ve heard about them.

They’re, they’ve been around in town for a couple years and a lot of the schools Title 1 schools we support a lot, so, [00:18:00] well, I mean, it’s, it’s also Angel Tree Christmas Kids. We usually shop for between 70, 80 kids. Every year for that

Jonathan Breeden: 70 or 80 kids.

Trisha Perna: Mm-hmm.

Jonathan Breeden: Oh my goodness. That is tremendous. The counselors

Trisha Perna: get ahold of us and give us lists and we all sign up and go out and get to shop and rap and,

Jonathan Breeden: well, I mean, it’s, I I, I’m so happy to hear you list those organizations you support. We’ve had. The vast majority of them on this podcast

Trisha Perna: I’ve heard

Jonathan Breeden: Right, right. And we had the Isaiah 117 house, which is gonna be a house for children coming into the foster care system to go and stay for a few hours up to 24 hours until they can be placed Yes. With a foster family that will be.

Toys. Yes. They’ll be able to have a bath. They will be able to get shoes or whatever. They would like to have such a

Trisha Perna: wonderful, wonderful service. Tremendous organization building

Jonathan Breeden: that in Selma. And that’s gonna be new to Johnston County and something that we are, we’re in desperate need of. You talked about House of Hope, we’ve not had [00:19:00] anybody from House of Hope, but that’s the one with the teenagers, correct?

Trisha Perna: Yes.

Jonathan Breeden: Right.

Trisha Perna: Yes.

Jonathan Breeden: Yes. So there’s a home in Clayton. It’s a residential home for teenage girls who are having a tough time either through life circumstances maybe some mental health issues, maybe all types of things. Sometimes their family situation is falling apart through no fault of their own, and they bring kids in and that’s been there probably. 15, 20 years now.

Trisha Perna: Yeah.

Jonathan Breeden: And they, those kids live there. They go to school there, they get counseling, they get support they get loved, they get structure. They get three meals a day.

Trisha Perna: Yes.

Jonathan Breeden: Some of the kids coming there haven’t had three meals in a day in a long time and they’ve done a tremendous job there.

Trisha Perna: Yes.

Jonathan Breeden: I Played they, their golf tournament, they all that stuff.

Trisha Perna: Great. Yeah.

Jonathan Breeden: Harbor House, which is a domestic violence shelter.

Trisha Perna: Yes.

Jonathan Breeden: Here in Johnston County, they also offer domestic violence classes for free. If you happen to be in a relationship like that or know somebody that is, you can go to  harborshelter.org and you can get their information and they will help you.

They have a 24/7 crisis line. [00:20:00] They have a shelter, you can go stay in. They have classes on how to. Get out of domestic violence situations, how to stay out of them. So I mean, this is just tremendous that you’re choosing the, the boys and girls clubs of, of Johnston County helping you know, disadvantaged youth there in Selma and kids all over Johnston County with, with life skills cooking skills homework help.

All that stuff. We had a guest on, if you go back a couple weeks, we had Chandler Pernell on and he’s been very involved with the Boys and Girls Club of Johns County as of High. And he told me something I did not know, which was that they’ve not had a kid not graduated high school that came through. The Boys and Girls gloves.

Your kid of Johnston County. I did not know. That’s

fantastic. I didn’t Oh my gosh. I’m Chand didn’t have to share that with you. That’s right. Chandler Pernell told me that. So with the women, so yeah, I’m gonna have to tell the ladies that.

That’s fantastic. No, it’s, it’s awesome and I’m so glad. Y’all are supporting those groups that have for a long time.

Mm-hmm. And, and, and you know, I’ve tried to tout those groups on here. I try to give money, time, resources to [00:21:00] them. Yeah. Just like y’all do. I, I think, I think that’s great.

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Jonathan Breeden: What are some other fundraisers? I guess the fashion show may come back. That’s a fundraiser.

Trisha Perna: It might. So we do another fun one, which is called, “Murder Mystery Dinner”. So like your regular old, like you play with your besties. Right. And, but that’s really great because we use the performing arts. Teenagers to perform for us.

Jonathan Breeden: Okay.

Trisha Perna: And so, And that’s fantastic. That’s a lot of fun of course mostly the parents are the ones showing up, so a lot of times, we’ll even buy tickets to attend. The last two years, I had to sell my ticket back so that they could give,

give the ticket to a late comer parents, so, which is [00:22:00] perfectly fine. So we do that at the clubhouse. That’s two nights Saturday and Sunday.

Jonathan Breeden: Okay.

Trisha Perna: So, and that I believe, if this, if my dates are right is gonna be January 16th and 17th. If that’s a Friday and a Saturday.

Jonathan Breeden: Okay. In 2026. So that’s coming up.

Trisha Perna: That’s 2026.

Jonathan Breeden: Yeah. Well that’s awesome.

Trisha Perna: That’s coming up.

Jonathan Breeden: That’s awesome. Yeah. And I mean, while you are a working club, y’all do have member socials.

Trisha Perna: We do, we have a social once a year. Our next one is actually next Thursday, August 21st.

So if there’s anybody out there who wants to come visit us and, and learn more and see what we do, you’re more than welcome to. It’s from six to seven 30. There’s might be a little glass of wine involved in that as well.

Jonathan Breeden: Well, that seems to be a theme here. Uh,

Trisha Perna: the Women’s Club in Johnston County. A little bit of wine. Nobody joke about it all.

Jonathan Breeden: Anyway, I can under, I can understand that. Yeah. I mean the so when does it meet? Where does it meet?

Trisha Perna: We meet at the clubhouse.

Jonathan Breeden: Okay.

Trisha Perna: Our general meeting is once a month, September through May. And that’s [00:23:00] the second Wednesday at 11:45. Be there 11:45. So you, so we know you have a plate of food ready for you. Okay. So. Yep.

Jonathan Breeden: And so it doesn’t meet in the summer.

Trisha Perna: We, we do not meet formally in the summer. The CSPs do their kickoff meetings in the summer. Our, our year goes from June through May.

Jonathan Breeden: Okay.

Trisha Perna: So those first couple months when we’re not meeting formally, they’re doing their kickoff meetings, coming up with the projects they wanna do for that year.

Also, each CSP, they take turns in hosting the lunch at the clubhouse for the general meeting. So that’s when they plan their program guest speaker. You know, menus their game plan for how they’re gonna host. So, and they, they all do such a fantastic job decorating the clubhouse and just making it a really, really fun day for us to conduct our business, so.

Jonathan Breeden: Well, that’s great. So what are the membership requirements? You know, I thought you, I’ve always thought you had to be older and rich to be a member of the Women’s Club, Clayton, I’m [00:24:00] just saying I, know that’s not true. I,

Trisha Perna: I get it,

Jonathan Breeden: but that was always my thought.

Trisha Perna: I get it. I totally right. So stereotypical, but even when I was growing up, I was like, I’d watch those ladies walk outta that little building in my small town and be like, oh man, I wish I could be like them.

So anyway the only requirement is $85 a year. If you’re gonna have lunch, we do have a night-time group if you want to join and you can’t meet during the day. We have what we call Nightingales and those are also part of the Women’s Club of Clayton membership. But I do those meetings over Zoom and they’re the Mondays after the general meeting.

And it’s just a way for me to be able to let them know what happened at the general meeting, what new things are coming up. All those things, but I just come to the social, come to a meeting. You can come to two free meetings before you have to make a decision whether you join or not. And just see what we’re about.

Jonathan Breeden: And the I think there’s a junior women’s club [00:25:00] clayton?

Trisha Perna: Yes. Clayton, right? Clayton does have a Juniors club. Yes. Okay. What is that? Fantastic.

Jonathan Breeden: Who’s in that?

Trisha Perna: So Tempest Templa is their president right now. She’s fantastic. She’s doing a great job with them. They are a little bit younger crowd there.

They meet at night, so you can be with them. I think you have until you’re 35, I think 45 maybe. And then you need to roll over into us if you want to continue. But they do, they do the, the same thing that we do. So support the community and. Have a good time doing it

Jonathan Breeden: and help y’all with y’all’s projects like Taste of Carolina and stuff.

Trisha Perna: They absolutely can’t. Will. Yes.

Jonathan Breeden: Well, that’s great. That’s great. And so you don’t, you don’t have to be rich and you don’t have to be 70.

Trisha Perna: No. You just have to be willing, you have to be willing to, to wanna serve the community, you know, and there’s a, there’s a certain passion that needs to be there, but otherwise, that’s it.

Bring your smile and let’s get, let’s get it done.

Jonathan Breeden: It be, it, it won’t work. Right. It’s not a social club, it’s a working club, not a

Trisha Perna: social club. We work. So [00:26:00] please be ready to work.

Jonathan Breeden: I gotcha, I gotcha you. So, so I mean, how can people, I mean, I guess reach out to the women’s club.

Trisha Perna: So we have a website that’s twccnc.org. They’re, we, they’re welcome to do that. We’re also on Facebook Woman’s Club of Clayton. Know the, on the Facebook page, by the way. And yeah, so you can do that or reach out to me. I get emails all the time, so I’m, I’m happy to have people reach out to me as well.

Jonathan Breeden: Well, what are the I guess we got a couple more questions here. What are the most exciting I. What are you looking forward to? I mean, you, I mean, you’re gonna be president here. Your, your term is just starting. We’re recording this in the middle of August. This episode probably runs in October.

So as you move forward, your regular meeting started in September. I mean, what are you looking forward to? Yeah, we got Taste of Carolina coming up. We got murder mystery. Anything else? Anything different or unique, maybe the fashion show comes back, that you’d like to see the club do under your leadership?

Trisha Perna: Oh my gosh, they do so much. I do have a president special [00:27:00] project going on for my administration right now, which is engraved paving bricks. We’re gonna replace some broken concrete at the front of the club between the sidewalk and the steps with engraved brick. And then also in the back there’s a gate that the ladies can come through. Kind of take a shortcut from the parking to the building.

And we’re also gonna make a pad there with those engraved brick so that they have somewhere to walk ’cause right now it gets, you know, if it’s rainy or you know, it gets a little muddy and slippery. And so we’re gonna take care of that. So that’s my project for this time. I would really like to get a mentoring. Program started, a formal mentoring program started so that new members can get caught up quickly on the process.

’cause we’re very we’re not a formal group, you know, when it comes to, you don’t have to sit there and, you know, with your hands, no elbows on the table and all that. But, but for learning the processes and, and kind of get. Pass the intimidation [00:28:00] of everything that happens. I think if we could get a mentoring program going, we, we, we could get more members that get involved and, and, right,

Jonathan Breeden: right.

Well, how many members do you have now?

Trisha Perna: Last count was 84.

Jonathan Breeden: Well, that’s a pretty good group.

Trisha Perna: Yeah.

Jonathan Breeden: Do most of them come to most of the meetings?

Trisha Perna: We get the, the majority coming. That’s awesome. Yes. Don’t, don’t tell the fire department that, just, just paper over capacity. I’m not

Jonathan Breeden: sure. Well, and I, before we get, we get, we in this, like you can rent the building, community groups can rent the building.

Yes. I, I I’ve been to events there. Mm-hmm. What’s involved with that?

Trisha Perna: Yeah. So you can get on the website, the applications there. The clubhouse rules are there contact information? Is there? Capacity for that is 60. But we’ve had, we have a lot of bridal showers there. We have a lot of baby showers there.

We’ve had weddings there. You, you know, you name it. And then we have smaller organizations and businesses that meet there as well for their annual, you know, just get out of the office and have an an, their annual game plan meeting or, you know, whatever they wanna [00:29:00] do. So we’ve done a lot of that. We have book clubs that meet there, so yeah, it’s actually pretty busy on the weekends.

Jonathan Breeden: Well, that’s great. That’s great. Well, the last question we last ask everybody on this podcast, you’ve been here for five and a half years now. What do you love most about Johnston County?

Trisha Perna: I’m gonna, I’m gonna sound like a broken record, but I’m gonna say it. It’s the people. It’s the people.

It’s the,

Jonathan Breeden: it’s always the people.

Trisha Perna: It’s the people. It’s you know, I could not have landed anywhere with nicer people and I just instantly fell in love, so.

Jonathan Breeden: Oh, that’s great. That’s great. Well, we’d like to thank Trish for coming on and being our guest on this week’s episode of The Best of Johnston County podcast and educating all of us on the Women’s Club of Clayton and all of their involved.

You do not have to be 70 years old, and you do not have to be rich to be a member if you take nothing else. If you care about this community and you want to get involved, this club is for you. It is one of the best clubs that has been around forever, and they have done so much in the 25 years that I’ve been here in Johnston County and they’re still doing [00:30:00] a tremendous amount and they’re gonna continue to grow and do even more as we move forward. As we ask you earlier, please like, follow, subscribe to this podcast wherever you’re seeing it, whether it be on Apple, YouTube, Spotify, TikTok, LinkedIn, or any of the other social media channels.

The Best of Johnston County Podcast, if you’d be so kind, is to tag us in your Instagram stories. Best of Johnston County. That would help us grow our reach, and if you would give us a five star review down below, that would also reach, help us reach more people and let them know why Johnston County is the best county and why this podcast is for anybody that loves Johnston County.

Until next time, I’m your host, Jonathan Breeden.

That’s the end of today’s episode of Best of Johnston County, a show brought to you by the trusted team at Breeden Law Office. We thank you for joining us today and we look forward to sharing more interesting facets of this community next week. Every story, every viewpoint adds another thread to the rich tapestry of Johnston County.

If the legal aspects highlighted raised some [00:31:00] questions, help is just around the corner at www. breedenfirm. com.

On this week’s episode of The Best of Johnston County Podcast, I had the pleasure of sitting down with Trish Perna, the president of the Woman’s Club of Clayton. We talked about her journey to Johnston County, how she got involved in community service, and the tremendous impact the club has had on our community.

How Trish Found Her Way to Johnston County

Trish grew up along the Ohio River, just south of Steubenville, and graduated from Buckeye North High School. She spent most of her adult life in Las Vegas, where she worked for a cosmetic plastic surgeon. Thirty years in that profession gave her “plenty of stories,” as she put it with a smile.

In 2019, she and her husband decided to make a move. Her daughter and son-in-law, who serves in the Special Forces, had settled in the Fayetteville/Hope Mills area. With grandchildren—her “Grand Gems”—anchored here, there was no question about where she needed to be.

From Tree Lighting to Leadership

Like many newcomers, Trish looked for ways to connect with her community. She started by volunteering at the Clayton tree lighting, which is where she met Cheryl Champion. Cheryl told her about the Woman’s Club of Clayton, invited her to a meeting, and the rest is history. Trish joined, got involved, and now five years later, she’s serving as president.

The Woman’s Club of Clayton: A Working Club

I think one of the biggest misconceptions is that the Woman’s Club is just a social club. It isn’t. This is a working club. They roll up their sleeves and make things happen.

The club is part of the General Federation of Women’s Clubs and GFWC-NC at the state level. Their projects fall into five categories called Community Service Programs:

  • Environment
  • Arts & Culture
  • Health & Wellness
  • Civic Engagement & Outreach
  • Education & Libraries

Fundraisers and Projects That Matter

The Woman’s Club has been behind countless projects in Clayton over the decades. They even helped transform the Community Garden on Main Street into a Christmas destination that once drew more than 2,000 visitors. Today, they still maintain a fairy garden there for kids to enjoy.

Their largest fundraiser is the Taste of Carolina, held each year at The Farm at 42. Ten to twelve local restaurants come together for an evening of food, music, and dancing, and guests can take part in a silent auction. It’s an incredible event that raises tens of thousands of dollars for the community. The next one is already on the calendar for March 14, 2026.

Another fan favorite is the Murder Mystery Dinner, performed by local high school students and held over two nights at the clubhouse. The next one is scheduled for January 16–17, 2026.

Giving Back in Real, Tangible Ways

The funds raised go straight into Johnston County. Just in the past year, the Woman’s Club:

  • Purchased a bedroom and half-bath for the new Isaiah 117 House in Selma.
  • Donated four benches for the Town of Clayton.
  • Supported organizations like the Boys & Girls Club, House of Hope, Harbor House, Her Haven of Light, and local Title I schools.
  • Shopped for 70–80 children through the Angel Tree project.

As Clayton Mayor Jody McLeod says, “If you want something done, talk to the Woman’s Club of Clayton.”

Membership Is Open to All

Another myth I hear often is that you have to be wealthy or retired to join. Not true. Membership is open to any woman over 18, and dues are just $85 a year.

The club meets the second Wednesday of each month from September through May at their clubhouse at 109 South Church Street, across from the Clayton Library. For women who can’t attend daytime meetings, there’s also an evening group called the “Nightingales” that meets via Zoom. Right now, the club has 84 active members, most of whom are deeply involved.

What’s Next Under Trish’s Leadership

Trish shared that her presidential project is installing engraved paving bricks at the clubhouse—both in the front to replace broken concrete and in the back to create a safer pathway. She also hopes to create a mentoring program so new members can quickly get comfortable and involved.

Why Johnston County?

I always like to end by asking my guests what they love most about Johnston County. For Trish, the answer was simple: “It’s the people. I could not have landed anywhere with nicer people. I instantly fell in love.”

AND MORE TOPICS COVERED IN THE FULL INTERVIEW!!! You can check that out and subscribe to YouTube.

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