About Four one for all
The people, the promise, and the parents behind it all.
Get to know the family who started this, the story that shaped it, and the board that governs it.
A Parent’s Story
Before the draft, before the jersey, before any of the stadium lights, Josh and Kaitlyn were just two college kids who fell in love. Even then, they knew what they wanted their lives to be about. Giving back was never a plan they made later. It was who they were from the start.
When Josh signed his first autograph deal, the very first ten thousand dollars did not go toward anything for the couple. It went straight to Kaitlyn, and she used it to feed families experiencing homelessness. There was no foundation yet, and no platform. There was just a belief that whatever they were given was meant to be shared.
When Josh entered the NFL with the Jacksonville Jaguars, the number on his back, 41, became more than a number. It opened their eyes to the responsibility that comes with a platform. So they started Four One For All, pouring into kids and community through mentorship, football camps, school visits, a turkey drive, and events that brought people together. It was always about the next generation.
Then life happened.
In January 2024, their seven-year-old son Wesley was diagnosed with Acute Promyelocytic Leukemia. There is a silence that follows those words. A stillness no parent forgets. The months after were measured in hospital bracelets and long days at Nemours Children’s Health. They watched Wesley fight with a courage beyond his years, held Vanessa and Julian close, and prayed in waiting rooms. And they noticed the other families around them. They had support and resources. Not every family did.
Wesley rang the bell on September 2, 2025. Then they set out to help the families still waiting to ring theirs.
Out of that hospital hallway, Four One For Hope was born. It is their promise to stand beside families facing pediatric cancer and to help fund the research that gives children more time. They partner with organizations across Jacksonville so that families receive more than treatment. They receive community.
The number 41 has always carried meaning for the Hines-Allen family. At Kentucky, no one has worn it since Josh. And in the story of Noah, after forty days and nights of storm, the forty-first was the first day of something new. That is what this foundation is to them. To every family sitting in a hospital room tonight, their message is simple: you are seen, you are not alone, and there is hope here.
Rooted in love. Strengthened by faith. Carried by hope.