He enrolled in the University of Nebraska but stopped his studies several times twice for positions as a principal.[5][3] He returned to the university in 1910 and planned on graduating in December 1911; however, he left school again in the fall semester to pursue an opportunity with the Lincoln Academy.[6] He earned a B.A. from the University of Nebraska in 1912.[7]
In 1902, Littel began his career in education teaching in Indianola, Nebraska.[2][10][11] He also taught at McCook High School.[3] Next, he was assistant principal of Dorchester High School.[3] Next, he was the principal of the Roco School.[3]
In 1907, he was elected the County Superintendent of Public Instruction of Hitchcock County, Nebraska, serving in this capacity from January 1908 and January 1910.[12][13][14] He ran for a second term in 1909 as a Republican.[15] He was endorsed by The Republican Leader newspaper of Trenton, Nebraska, and the Culbertson Banner in Culbertson, Nebraska, with the latter saying, "Littel...has made the best showing of any superintendent Hitchcock County even had".[16][17] However, he was not reelected.[18]
In August 1911, Littel became the principal/superintendent and part owner of the Lincoln Academy.[19][6][3] In 1915, he became the superintendent of Kenesaw Public Schools in Kenesaw, Nebraska.[20][21] During his summer vacation, he sold heating and ventilation systems for public buildings.[21] In the fall of 1916, he became the superintendent of schools in Cambridge, Nebraska.[22][23] In February 1917, the school board gave him a two-year contract for the position which paid $1,300 the first year and $1,400 the second year.[24][25] In November 1917, he was appointed to a new three-person state board of control for high school athletics.[26]
In 1933, he leased property in the Hackensack YMCA and founded the Junior College of Bergen County in September.[29][7][30][10] He served on its board of trustees and was the college's president.[8][2][31] He also taught vocational sociology and German.[9] In 1936, he purchased a property for the junior college which later became the Fairleigh Dickinson University Teaneck campus.[29][30]
He retired in February 1951 and became the president emeritus of what was then Bergen Junior College.[29][31][1] Under his leadership, Bergen County Junior College became the largest junior college in New Jersey.[1]
He was a member of the Christian Businessmen's Committee of Bergen County, the Hackensack Rotary Club, the Shriners, the Teaneck City Club, the Teaneck Masonic Lodge, and the Trip of the Month Club at the Y.M.C.A.[2] He was a member of the Teaneck Presbyterian Church.[2]
^ ab"First Junior College for County Opens" (pt. 2). Ridgewood Herald-News. Ridgewood, New Jersey. 1933-09-14. p. 8. Retrieved 2024-01-15 – via Newspapers.com.