Kodiak’s Santa To The Villages
by U.S. Coast Guard PO1 Ali Blackburn December 23, 2022
Six Santas, 16 elves, 14 pilots and
2,000 pounds of Christmas presents travelled to the seven remote
villages of Kodiak Island, Alaska, from Nov. 28 to Dec. 7, 2022.
Santa to the Villages (S2V) has been a Kodiak holiday
tradition for 46 years, but there is so much more than meets the
eye when it comes to the planning and execution of this highly
anticipated, week-long celebration.
U.S. Coast Guard Petty Officer 1st Class Jason Flynt, an Aviation Survival Technician at Air Station Kodiak, looks out the door of an MH-60 Jayhawk helicopter during a flight to Port Lions, Alaska, on November 30, 2022. Santa, an air station volunteer, dresses up and delivers presents, fresh fruit, and hygiene products alongside members of the Spouse's Association of Kodiak every year since 1976. (Image
created by USA Patriotism! from U.S. Coast Guard photo by PO1 Ali Blackburn.)
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Not only do the
village children, teachers, and parents lose sleep thinking
about Santa’s visit, but members of the Spouse’s Association of
Kodiak (SAK) basically eat, breathe, and live all things S2V for
months prior to the actual event.
SAK members work
year-round to facilitate this historic outreach program,
coordinating with the rural school staff members, the community
of Kodiak, Coast Guard Air Station and Base Kodiak personnel and
other local supporters to raise funds, collect donations, and
help Santa deliver toys, stockings, hygiene products,
hand-knitted items, fruit, and books.
“We start prepping
around Thanksgiving for the following year,” said Katie
Hamilton, a co-chair member of the SAK. “We shop Black Friday
deals for board games, dolls, legos, puzzles and then we heavily
shop during the day after Christmas. This helps us build our
stock in wrapping paper, gift bags, and odds and ends for
stocking stuffers.”
Hamilton and her fellow S2V chair
members shop throughout the year for over 180 kids and 35
teachers throughout the villages. Around Halloween, they start
asking people to donate candy so they can include sweet treats
in the kids’ stockings.
Not only are the gifts
individually selected for each child by age and gender, but the
SAK members utilize a detailed spreadsheet to keep track of
items each child received in previous years, so each year they
receive something new that they want or need.
Phyllis
Clough has been working for the Kodiak Island Borough School
District for 42 years and has experienced both the anticipation
and excitement of helping to coordinate Santa’s arrival to her
hometown in Old Harbor.
“My favorite part of this event
is seeing how happy the kids are when they see the Coast Guard
approaching with the special guest and the joy it brings to the
families,” said Clough. “My husband and I decide what foods to
make for the helicopter crew and in the past have cooked fish
pie (pirok), fry bread (alciit), smoked salmon and/or chicken.
This event shows the love and caring of the Coast Guard and the
spouse’s association.”
Children and school teachers in Port Lions, Alaska, with Santa Claus and his elves during the annual Santa to the Villages program
on November 30, 2022. The elves belong to the Spouse’s Association of Kodiak, an organization with 47 members.(Image created by USA Patriotism! from U.S. Coast Guard photo by PO1 Ali Blackburn.)
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It all began in 1974, when a Coast
Guard pilot noticed children in Kodiak’s remote villages had
limited opportunities to interact with Santa and receive gifts.
Jane Clark, a Coast Guard spouse, began coordinating the S2V
project in 1976 when she and her husband, Capt. Charles Clark,
were stationed in Kodiak.
At the height of this event,
gifts were delivered to nearly 400 students across the island
but, due to dwindling village populations, 145 children received
gifts this year.
The spouses’ association names a new
project coordinator each year and funding for the gifts comes
heavily from the Stiles-Clark auction which is held every fall
in Kodiak. The auction is named for Jane Clark and Lt. Cmdr. Jim
Stiles, the pilot who recognized the need in the villages.
Stiles died in a helicopter crash near Cape Cod, Massachusetts,
in 1979.
With 47 members in the SAK and only 16 spots
available, the organization came up with a nifty idea to decide
who gets to dress up as an elf and fly with Santa to the
villages. For each hour spent volunteering for any SAK event,
the spouses get one entry into the drawing of being selected as
an elf. This year, the organization had over 800 entries into
the drawing.
“Hearing about S2V and how it reaches out
to the children in the outer villages of Kodiak made me want to
be a part of such a great program,” said Lydia Sandberg, a
co-chair member on the S2V program. “The anticipation of seeing
the kids meet Santa and receive their gifts is incredible. It’s
truly an honor to see all our hard work culminate into one big
Christmas party times seven.”
Hamilton and Sandberg noted
that there are a lot of moving pieces that must come together to
pull off a mission this large.
This year, Base Kodiak
housing let the SAK borrow a housing unit that was turned into
Santa’s workshop for six weeks leading up to the event. This
allowed the ladies to prepare and store the gifts much easier,
using every space from bedrooms to bathrooms to closets and
pantries to organize the separate villages’ gifts.
While
the event can be stressful at times, mainly due to the
unpredictable Kodiak weather that can affect flight times and
cause delays, Hamilton says she’s learned a lot in the process
and plans to use her experiences to pass them to future chairs
of the S2V mission.
“The kids look forward to this all
year and they are so sweet and loving,” said Hamilton. “It’s
such a fun, rewarding mission and we feel honored to be a part
of it.”
What began as a simple idea has continued to grow
into a time-honored tradition that is loved by one and all.
Coast Guard Gifts
| U.S. Coast Guard
| U.S. Department
of Homeland Security
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