At 100 years old, Bill Kruschel remembers the day he fell in love with music at the age of 8 after finding a gem in an old farm attic. Kruschel, a World War II veteran and active member of Stillwater’s Croix Chordsmen, celebrated his birthday Tuesday with laughter, memories and song.
“I’m just so thankful that I’ve got it all together yet and can do all I do,” Kruschel said.
Bill Kruschel of Stillwater’s Croix Chordsmen Chorus celebrates his 100th birthday on Tuesday, March 4, 2025. Kruschel’s chorus brothers threw him a surprise birthday party to honor his life, including a “Certified Oldie Award,” at Charlie’s Restaurant and Irish Pub in Stillwater. (Courtesy of Croix Chordsmen Chorus)
Kruschel’s birthday celebration began Monday evening, he said, when White Bear Lake Mayor Dan Louismet visited his home and established Tuesday, March 5, as White Bear Lake’s Bill Kruschel Day. The celebration continued Tuesday morning when Kruschel’s family made him a “breakfast like you wouldn’t believe,” and later that evening when the Croix Chordsmen threw him a surprise party after rehearsal at Charlie’s Restaurant and Irish Pub with balloons, cake and an award that read “Certified Oldie.”
“He can banter with the best of you,” friend Cliff Turnbull said. “You say, ‘Hi Bill, it’s good to see you,’ and he says, ‘Yeah it’s good to be seen.’”
Turnbull described Kruschel as funny, lively and talented. He said Kruschel even rides an electric three-wheel tricycle around his neighborhood in White Bear Lake, despite having impaired vision and being hard of hearing. How he does it, Turnbull said, he’ll never know.
Kruschel said he pulls out the trike as soon as it’s 50 degrees outside. Before the vision loss, Kruschel drove a car and a motorcycle, which he said he rode until he was 94.
“When you’ve got a tricycle and ride around the town that you’ve driven through all your life, at 10 miles an hour, you’ve got a full new world,” Kruschel said.
Aside from his humor, Turnbull said Kruschel is passionate about music and is “aggressive” when it comes to practicing for performances, something he admires.
Gem in the attic
Music has always been a large part of Kruschel’s life, he said, though he has never known how to read it. In 1933, Kruschel’s family moved to a farm after his father passed away. In the attic of the farm, Kruschel said he found an old accordion.
“And that was the beginning of it all,” Kruschel said.
He also remembers the first time he soloed, he said. It was a cold day in St. Paul in 1950 and the other choir members did not show up to church, but the organist and Kruschel didn’t let that stop them. Instead, they performed for the little audience they had.
“He can play anything by ear,” Kruschel’s son Bill F. Kruschel said. “He’s just got that talent: He can sit down at a piano and knock out a tune. He’s got his ukulele that he loves to take all over, and he can do the chords to sing to all the songs he loves and he’s got a beautiful voice.”
Last year, Kruschel sang Bing Crosby’s “Dear Hearts and Gentle People” at a conference in Minneapolis with Croix Chordsmen director Jay Althof’s quartet.
Kruschel received a standing ovation from the crowd, his son said. But his favorite memory of his dad’s performances was when he sang the national anthem at a Minnesota Twins game in 2016.
Turnbull said to live to 100 is remarkable, but to do it with the quality of a singing voice that Kruschel has is something else.
“Bill Kruschel has one of the best voices I’ve ever listened to,” Turnbull said.
Kruschel and Turnbull are both leads in the chorus and sing the melody. The chorus uses sheet music, but as Kruschel cannot read it, he often listens to the group’s learning tracks using his hearing aids. Though some days, the tracks are hard to listen to and Turnbull will often stand next to Kruschel and sing in his ear.
Bill Kruschel, right, of Stillwater’s Croix Chordsmen Chorus and Cliff Turnbull, left. (Courtesy of Croix Chordsmen Chorus)
“I have the privilege of standing next to a guy that I admire an awful lot,” Turnbull said.
Kruschel joined the Croix Chordsmen in 2022, ready to jump into the action of performing at local events, according to Turnbull.
The all-male a cappella chorus began in 1951 in River Falls, Wis., as a chapter of the “Barbershop Harmony Society.” Today, the over 35 active members rehearse Tuesdays at 7 p.m. at Our Savior’s Lutheran Church in Stillwater with members from all over the state.
Kruschel said he appreciates the group because they each value the tradition of the music and they’re just “a bunch of guys that really enjoy singing and competing with one another to sound better.”
“You don’t know how much it means to me to sing the national anthem for Memorial Day and with a group of people who are sincere about it,” Kruschel said.
3M mechanical engineer
One of Kruschel’s biggest life accomplishments includes working for 3M as a mechanical engineer for 37 years during what he called “a heyday of manufacturing.” He was able to travel the world and, in 1958, the company began making floppy disks, which he said was the beginning of a national effort to hire more minorities and women.
“It was one of the best things that ever happened,” Kruschel said.
Kruschel is also the father of three children, one of whom has intellectual disabilities. Bill F. Kruschel said his father was on the committee to form Northeast Metro District 916, an intermediate school district that provides resources to students with disabilities to ensure that his son and others would have the opportunity to learn. Bill F. said his father’s support inspired him to become a special-education teacher. Kruschel said this and supporting his neurodivergent son are among the highlights of his life.
“He is my hero,” Bill F. said while tearing up. “I’m so proud of him and we’re so blessed to have him in our lives.”
Leading a long, healthy life runs in the family, according to Kruschel. His mom lived to be 101; he has a 98-year-old sister and a 96-year-old brother.
During the war, Kruschel was a Navy medic attached to the Marines in the South Pacific, Bill F. said. He joined the division in Okinawa, Japan, then was in China for four months, Kruschel said. He wasn’t involved in direct combat, but he did help those who were.
“I was one of the lucky guys that got into the service in June of 1943 and I got back out in January of 46,” Kruschel said. “Went all the way across the Pacific Ocean to China and back and I’m here to talk about it.”
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From being a WWII Navy medic, working for 3M, parenting, singing and everything in between, Kruschel has lived a rich life, he said. Through it all, positivity and his faith in God are what have guided him, he said – a lesson he learned from his mother.
“Enjoy people and keep smiling,” Kruschel said. “Anybody can look growly. My big thing in life was to stay as far away from negative people as I ever could.”
The surprise 100th birthday celebration was a hit, Turnbull and Kruschel said. Though the roads were icy from the night’s snowstorm, it didn’t stop the party and “Happy Birthday” was sung to Kruschel, in a four-part barbershop harmony, of course.
“I can’t wait till tomorrow all my life,” Kruschel said.
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