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David Walls

1941 - 2020

David Walls obituary, 1941-2020, Sebastopol, CA

David Walls Obituary

David Walls
October 21, 1941 - June 6, 2020
David Walls, a dedicated social justice activist and community organizer died at his Sebastopol home on Saturday June 6, after a long struggle with Parkinson's Disease. Professor Emeritus of Sociology and retired Dean of Extended Education at Sonoma State University, and an eager mentor to young people, David nevertheless wrote in 2012 "I found my calling in retirement, my true passion; or did I recover my youthful passion: organizing? "He had time then to participate in organizing the Living Wage Campaign and to bring together the group that founded the North Bay Organizing Project (NBOP), in which he participated as long as he physically could. Even up to his last weeks, he was working on an article about building an effective united front against what he saw as an emerging fascist movement. David's youth in Minnesota was spent hunting, fishing and camping as an avid Boy Scout and building an elaborate ham radio system. He studied economics at UC Berkeley, became an active member of SLATE, the campus progressive political party, and participated in anti-nuclear weapons activity and the Bay Area civil rights movement. He also read Michael Harrington's The Other America, about poverty in America, and Harry Caudill's Night Comes to the Cumberlands, and was moved to join the War on Poverty after graduation. He worked first for the Dept. of Health, Education & Welfare in Washington, DC, and then joined the Community Action program in the Office of Economic Opportunity. There he met some Appalachian Volunteers from VISTA; "they urged me when I was tired of being a Washington bureaucrat to come see what it was like to work directly in the field." Shortly afterwards he joined the AV community organizing staff in eastern Kentucky. He planned to stay a year but remained for five, eventually serving as the Executive Director in the program's final year: "Once we started helping small farmers and landowners to oppose strip mining, (we were) hit by a political hailstorm…" David observed. He met his future wife, Lucia Gattone, a mental health counselor in the local community clinic and they married in 1971. He also earned Master's & Ph.d. degrees from the U. of Kentucky and then joined the university faculty teaching sociology and social work, as well as serving as Associate Director of the Appalachian Center, an interdisciplinary research institute. In 1981 he returned to California with his wife and young son, joining the administration at Sonoma State and eventually serving for sixteen years as Dean of Extended Education and as a Professor of Sociology until retirement in 2005. His publications include Appalachia in the Sixties: Decade of Reawakening, The Activist's Almanac, based on interviews with over 100 leaders of national advocacy organizations, and Community Organizing: Fanning the Flames of Democracy. His teaching emphasized multidisciplinary approaches to the civil rights movement, the women's movement, and the environmental movement. When he retired he returned to actively organizing, rather than just studying it. He was involved with the Living Wage Campaign and other attempts to improve the lives of Sonoma County workers, and, believing that the county needed an effective community organization in the (Saul) Alinsky tradition, in 2008 he assembled the core group that launched the now flourishing North Bay Organizing Project (NBOP). His gravestone, he once suggested gleefully, should Be inscribed: "Change the world? I tried." Survivors include his wife, Lucia Gattone of Sebastopol, his son Jesse Michael Walls and daughter-in-law Norma, of Santa Rosa, and three grandchildren, and his sister Barbara Walls Hansen of Scottsdale, AZ. Contributions to the North Bay Organizing Project, the International Committee for Refugees or a social justice organization of your choice are welcome. Online condolences at www.PleasantHillsMemorialPark.com, where information about a future memorial gathering will also be listed when decided.

To plant trees in memory, please visit the Sympathy Store.

Published by Press Democrat on Jun. 12, 2020.

Memories and Condolences
for David Walls

Sponsored by Pleasant Hills Memorial Park & Mortuary - Sebastopol.

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Courtney Kane

October 17, 2023

I knew David in Washington in the mid-1960s. He was an inspiration to me and to others to follow our better angels. Peace.

William Johnson

August 16, 2021

David and I had a class together at Coral Gables High. David was reading fiction such as Lawrence Durrells Alexandria Quartet. His assortment of books led me to reading that I might not otherwise have discovered. I have thought of David often and just today August 16 2021 I looked him up. First Wikipedia and then other sources to discover his splendid career as a person and an educator in the broader sense of the word. And I gather- a courageous gentleman. I am distressed at his passing from a life David lived so well

Bennett Poage

September 5, 2020

David hired me in 1969 to be the first Economic development specialist for the Appalachian Volunteers. This laid the groundwork for a lifetime of socio-economic work in Appalachia: The Grass Roots Economic Development Corporation (GREDC) in Jackson, Ky, The Commission on Religion in Appalachia (CORA), in Knoxville, TN, and the Human/Economic Appalachian Development Corporation (HEAD) in Berea, KY. All thanks to David's trust in me.

Roger Hayes

July 16, 2020

I did not know David personally but he sounds like such a decent and caring person. I am currently retired but spent 20 years as a community organizer and another 20+ in public health. A friend and I teach a course in Community Organizing at the College of Mt. St. Vincent here in the Bronx. We had been looking for some fresh material for our reading list for our course when we came upon David's Community Organizing book a few years ago. I just wanted his family & friends to how his influence reached out here to the East Coast. We found his book to be very helpful for our students. There are not many concise and readable treatments of community organizing and how it relates to social movements and other approaches to social change. I would periodically google David Walls to pick up links to some of his other writings. I was saddened when I saw the notice the other day about his passing. Please know he has had a positive impact on students here in our community, many of whom are children of immigrants and the first in their family to attend college. Young people today are trying to figure how to make a future and how to make a difference -- David's book serves as a helpful guide.

Samuel Tuttelman

July 15, 2020

For many years I worked in San Francisco and Oakland. Commuting left me no time to be involved in organizing here in Sonoma County. When I retired it was time for me to get reengaged. David was the person I naturally turned to learn what was happening here. I met David many years ago when Lucia and I both worked at SAY. David, thanks for turning me on to NBOP and for all you have done for this community. You are missed! But rest well knowing that you prepared many to continue the struggle.

Francisco Vazquez

July 13, 2020

When I first met David at Sonoma State University, I recognized him as an ally in the struggle for equity and diversity. Davids contributions to the struggle for social justice are well documented. There is one little known story Id like to add. When Marty Bennett came up with a plan to allow SRJC Latinx students to take my introductory course in the Hutchins School, as a way to build a sort of pipeline, we ran into seemingly insurmountable red tape. It took Davids intervention as Dean of Extended Education at SSU to make it happen. He contacted SRJC President Robert Agrella and worked out a solution. Later I was blessed with the opportunity to work with him in the North Bay Organizing Project. David was truly a role model for all of us in the way he approached social protest with a thoughtful, compassionate demeanor. I am grateful for the lessons I learned from him which I will carry with me to my last days, and grateful to have had him in my life. May he Rest In Peace.

Samuel Naujokas

July 12, 2020

When I was a 6th grader in Healdsburg, David was one of the first people to bring me into politics and to open my eyes to political happenings in the world. Even though I was just a kid, he treated me like an adult and brought me to some of the foundational MoveOn.org and NBOP meetings in 2010. This would turn out to be the first steps in a lifelong interest in politics and social justice. While I haven't seen David in a very long time, since we last spoke I have continued to pursue justice and political advocacy professionally and passionately. I've worked as an environmental justice VISTA for a Native American tribe in Alaska, served as a writer for local Sonoma County politicians, and will begin a graduate degree in environmental policy in the fall. David Walls was a big part of why I was inspired to pursue political, social, and environmental justice 10 years ago when I was just a kid, and I will forever be thankful for him for this. You have my deepest condolences and I will keep him in my heart. Ani mishtatef betsa'arech.

William Turner

June 13, 2020

David, whom I met through my mentor John B. Stephenson in 1979, inspired me to focus my work on Blacks in Appalachia, to include a book by that title. David also inspired www.aaaculturalcenter.org.

Susan Wattell

June 12, 2020

My thoughts and heart are with you and your family, Lucia, wishing you peace and health as you take care of each other in the days and months ahead and share memories of special times with your husband.

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