Bill Pilgram, in a tidy black suit and white lapel carnation, greeted visitors at the door of Hennepin Avenue United Methodist Church last week. Most folks had no idea of Pilgram's unusual claim to fame: He's been ushering here for nearly 80 years.
That's not to mention 70 years of nonstop church committee work and more than 25 years as a church carpenter who — at age 101 — is still wielding a hammer and saw.
While many churches have decadeslong volunteers, the scope of Pilgram's work and its duration put him in a rarefied league, church leaders said. And as Christmas Eve approaches, they know they can count on him to take his favorite post at the side door.
"Bill is always ready to do what needs to be done — even at 101," said the Rev. Judy Zabel, senior pastor at Hennepin United in Minneapolis.
Church volunteers today typically pitch in about one to five years, church leaders say. Pilgram and other longtimers belong to a generation and an era when helping out at church was a lifetime commitment.
Pilgram, a retired attorney who remains sharp and articulate, would have it no other way.
"The church was practically our lives," said Pilgram, referring to his now deceased wife, Caroline. "I love all the people."
Pilgram estimated he's volunteered at least 12 hours a week since the 1940s, doing everything from laying hardwood floors to lighting worship services to serving on the board of trustees.