1/20/04
This wonderful email community serves a lot of
functions: following the team, Kohn-oscenti,
Vail; all of it a celebration of the Middlebury lacrosse family. At times it serves the sad function of informing
the ‘team’ of one of our teammates passing.
On Sunday, Burch’s father, John, Sr. passed away.
John
certainly qualifies as one of our teammates and soul mates. For those of use who played on Burch’s teams,
there was that ever-present force on the sideline (actually bigger than
Burch). The force I speak of is a man
whose presence and demeanor spoke much louder than words. John Sr., like Burch, did not have a lot to
say, but what he said mattered: words of
support, warmth, good humor.
John,
and his wife Sarah, grew to be special friends of Maggie and me. In a low-keyed way, both provided some
welcomed mentoring to a then-young couple starting a family. Moreover, John was a great friend of
everything Middlebury. Along with John,
his two other sons, Dan and Charlie, attended Middlebury and their daughter,
Lisa, now works at the College.
Erin
and I have put in many years on the sideline and one of our joys is getting to
know the parents of the players. Often
these friendships run as deep as those we develop with the players we
coached. John Burchard, Sr. clearly
lives in that category. Having John Sr.
on the sideline was like having that mythical 11th player in the
true tradition of Panther lacrosse: character, toughness, a selfless presence.
I
know I speak for all of Burch’s teammates in extending our warmth, sympathies
and support to the Burchard family.
Jim Grube

Vail Tournament 2002
John Jr (in red shirt) and his Dad, John Sr. during
Middlebury Songfest

Vail Tournament - 2000
From left: Priscilla and Bob Quinn (parents of Erin
Quinn ’86),
John and Sarah Burchard (parents of John Burchard Jr. ’81 and
Joe and Zita Mercurio (in-laws of
Bobo Sideli ’77)
John
D. Burchard died of heart failure on January
18, 2004, at his home in Burlington
surrounded by his family. John was born
in Cleveland, Ohio,
on May 25, 1936, and grew
up in Olmstead Falls, Ohio,
where he graduated from high school as a three-sport varsity athlete in 1954,
lettering in football, basketball and track.
He obtained his B.A. in psychology from Denison
University in 1958 where he was a
member of the Kappa Sigma fraternity and the varsity football team. John met his wife of 46 years, Sara Nuzum, at Denison
and they were married in 1957. After
graduation John turned down a tryout with the St. Louis Cardinals football team
to pursue his Ph.D. in psychology from the University
of Nebraska. John began his professional life as a staff psychologist
at a treatment center for delinquent youth in Washington
State before accepting
an associate professorship at the University
of North Carolina in 1965. It was there John first began to work on what
would become a life-long endeavor, developing community-based alternatives to
institutional treatment of emotionally and behaviorally challenged youth. John continued that work after moving his
family to Vermont in 1970, when
he joined the faculty of the University
of Vermont psychology department where
he continued to teach until only a few weeks ago. Over the course of the next thirty-three
years he became a nationally-recognized authority and advocate for the adoption
and implementation of community-based Wraparound services for at-risk children and
youth.
While in North Carolina John was treasurer of the Quaker
Friends Meeting and, prior to desegregation, ran a summer program in
interracial living in Winston-Salem
under the sponsorship of the American Friends Service Committee. During the Vietnam War, he also assisted with
the establishment of a Friends counseling center at Fort
Bragg. He continued his social activism after
becoming a Vermonter, serving his community as a youth hockey and girls
softball coach, a member of the Burlington School Board, a ten-year member of
the Burlington Police Commission, long-time board member for the King Street
Youth Center, co-founder of the Foster Parent Training Program, co-founder of a
local group home for behaviorally challenged boys and Commissioner of the
Vermont Department of Social and Rehabilitative Services. John also established numerous programs for
youth, including the area's first hockey equipment exchange, a hockey program
for low income youth, a teen program at Lyman
C. Hunt School
and the Burlington Youth Employment Program which he helped start with
then-Mayor Bernie Sanders. In the past
year, John was recognized for his work with youth by receiving a lifetime
achievement award from the Vermont Collaboration Conference and the third
annual Puppets' Choice award from Kids On The Block Vermont, the latter award
prompting Mayor Peter Clavelle to declare April 30,
2003, "John and Sara Burchard Day here in Burlington . . . and around the
world."
John was an avid outdoorsman, enjoyed fishing, hiking and
canoeing, and loved spending time at the log cabin he built in Huntington,
VT.
He and Sara traveled around the world, visiting such far away places as
Australia, New Zealand, Russia, Europe, India, Mexico and Alaska, and made
lasting friendships with people from different backgrounds and cultures
wherever they went. John lived each day
to the fullest, always demonstrating a sincere interest in others, a generous
spirit, an indomitable optimism and a sense of humor that touched many, many
lives.
John is survived by his wife and best friend Sara, his son
John and wife Vicki of Glenview, Illinois, his son Dan and wife Jane of
Burlington, his daughter Lisa and husband Stephen Boudah
of Middlebury, grandchildren Sara, Elise, Nikki, Tommy and Lia,
his stepmother Ruth Burchard, brother Charlie and wife Ginny of Cleveland,
Ohio, and many loving and beloved in-laws, nephews, nieces, neighbors and
friends. He and Sara also opened their
home to many young people throughout their life together, including most
recently his good friend Omer Alicic. He was predeceased by his parents, Charles
and Elizabeth Burchard, and his youngest son, Charlie.
A memorial service to celebrate John's life will be held on Saturday, January 31, 2004, at 1:00 p.m. at the First Congregational Church, South
Winooski Avenue, Burlington. A reception will be held following the
service at an as-yet undetermined location.
Memorial donations in John's memory may be made to any of
the organizations and causes he supported during his life, including the King
Street Youth Center, P.O. Box 1615,
Burlington, Vermont 05402-1615; Kids On The Block Vermont, 294 North Winooski
Ave., Burlington, Vermont 05401; and the Charlie Burchard Memorial Trust Fund,
P.O. Box 638, Burlington, Vermont 05402-0638, a charitable trust fund
established in 1988 by John and his family to remember his son, Charlie, and to
support charitable causes, primarily centered in Vermont.
Corbin and Palmer Funeral Home, 71
South Union Street, Burlington, VT,
is in care of arrangements. To send an
online condolence to the family, visit www.corbinandpalmerfuneralhome.com.