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John C. Little Spirit Award
John C. Little came to Seattle in 1947 from East St. Louis with his
wife, Gertis. He went to work for the Seattle Water Department, but
his heart always was in creating a better life for the young people
of the community. His motto became, “In order to improve the life of
all people, you must improve the life of young people.”
John was accorded many honors and awards during his lifetime. He received
King County’s first Martin Luther King, Jr. Humanitarian Award; the
Washington State University President’s Faculty Award for Community
Service; the Salvation Army’s Torchy Award for Service to the Community;
the Bishop Foundation Youth Worker of the Year Award; and the City of
Seattle Community Service Award. In 1994, he received Safeco’s Rudy
Award for dedicated service to the community which included a $30,000
prize that he donated to the Seattle 4-H program.
John C. Little also served the community as a member of the Washington
Human Rights Commission, and as a member of the Seattle Board of Park
Commissioners from 1990 - 1997. In addition, John was very involved
with his community through his church.
John believed that sports competition offered opportunities for youth
development, and noticed that there was lack of such programs in the
inner city. He worked with others to create the Central Area Youth Association
in the 1960s. Always disguised by the success of its sports leagues,
CAYA subsequently expanded its programs with a variety of offerings,
including one-on-one tutoring of students and job training.
During the early 1970s Mr. Little helped devise a youth conservation
corps program in which inner city youth trained and worked in Olympic
National Park. Little concluded that he had never seen a program that
so profoundly affected the lives of its young participants, and from
that day on John C. Little searched for opportunities to expose young
people to wilderness experiences and challenges.
Although he was supporting a wife and seven children, John returned
to the University of Washington and earned a master’s degree from the
School of Social Work. He became director of the Mt. Baker Youth Service
Bureau, which pioneered a demanding, realistic job training and placement
program for inner-city youngsters.
John C. Little’s next and final career was as head of the Seattle 4-H
program, which falls under the aegis of Washington State University
and the King County Extension Program. While 4-H traditionally serviced
children from farming communities, Mr. Little created a program to deliver
4-H activities to urban youth, many from minority families, and most
from families of limited income. Food preparation, urban gardens, an
urban fair, job training, performing arts, and outdoor recreation became
the hallmarks of one of the most successful and innovative urban 4-H
programs in America. Instead of fields, barns, and farmhouses, the program
operated out of P-Patches, backyards, kitchens, community centers, schools,
churches, and Seattle Center. Seattle 4-H became one of the nation’s
largest and most successful 4-H programs, with an exceptional level
of participation from minority communities.
This led to the creation of the remarkable 4-H Challenge Program at
Franklin High School. John C. Little, who lived near the high school,
told the coach that his football team had a very serious problem: it
didn’t play as a team. In fact, the coach had never had a winning season,
and Franklin hadn’t won a football championship in 37 years. Working
together, Little and the coach designed a low-cost outward bound-type
program. The boys got better acquainted, engaged in team building activities,
faced challenges, took risks and set individual and group goals. From
a 2-win, 6-loss season in 1985, they won the Metro football championship
in 1986-and most years from then until now. The program was then expanded
to include more and more of the Franklin student body, including every
member of the freshman class. Skills in job development were gradually
introduced. School attendance improved, dropout rates declined, discipline
was better, and academic performance was enhanced.
In John’s seven years on the Board of Park Commissioners, he will be
most remembered for his gentle judgment of how a proposed policy or
new undertaking would be perceived by the people we serve, particularly
by the young people. His sensitivity to the needs and the attitudes
of youth belied his advanced years. If the Board wanted a thoughtful,
wise opinion on a subject, it turned to John C. Little.
John C. Little is survived by his wife, Mrs. Gertis Little, daughters
Georgetta, Brenda, Sandra, Patricia, and Yvonne, and sons John Jr.,
and Gregory, plus 17 grandchildren and 21 great grandchildren.
John C. Little, Sr. died in the company of his family on May 11, 1999,
after a long struggle with diabetes. He was 69. Mr. Little was loved
and respected by many, many people. He will truly be missed.
An annual award in his honor recognizes the Seattle Parks and Recreation
employee who exemplifies John's service to youth and community.
Update
July 13, 2007
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John C. Little
2005 Award Recipient

Superintendent Bounds presents Tom Ostrom with the 2005 award.
John C. Little, Sr. Spirit Award Longtime Parks employee Tom Ostrom
was selected as the 2005 recipient of the John C. Little, Sr. Spirit Award.
The award was presented at the Jan. 12 meeting of the Board of Park Commissioners.
In addition to his countless honors and volunteer positions, John C. Little,
Sr. served the community as a member of the Seattle Board of Park Commissioners
from 1990 to 1997, and was tireless advocate for youth. His motto was,
“In order to improve the life of all people, you must improve the life
of young people.” The award was created in his honor to recognize Seattle
Parks and Recreation staff who mentor youth; provide leadership in the
community; make a difference in young lives; and go above and beyond the
call of duty.
Tom fit these criteria to a T. He has been a strong and highly effective
advocate for teens with the department and community, mentored at-risk
teens, and trained many young staff members who eventually became recreation
coordinators or assistant coordinators.
Tom has also:
- Coached youth basketball and baseball;
- Established a teen program at the Southwest Community Center that
was a grass-roots effort to establish team centers;
- Started a teen council to address teen issues at the Southwest Community
Center;
- Piloted programs for teens at Golden Gardens Bathhouse; and
- Leveraged his advocacy with advisory councils and the community
to obtain funds for teen programs.
Past Recipients
- Pat Warberg
- Elaine Dunn
- Don Ganchorre
- Dennis Cook
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