Curtis Hansen, a longtime choral director, editor, music publisher and World War II veteran who helped to put Minnesota on the map as a leader in choral music and performance, died Jan. 29 at age 90.
Hansen, of Edina, was the last remaining founder of the American Choral Directors Association, which has grown to more than 18,000 members since its beginning in 1959.
"He was one of the very special choral music treasures in the state of Minnesota," said Diana Leland, longtime friend and past president of the state, regional and national choral directors association.
Muriel, his wife of 66 years, said that she met Curtis when he arrived in Luck, Wis., to teach high school band and choir. She sang in the church choir that he also directed. He had graduated from St. Olaf College and earned a master's degree at the Minneapolis College of Music.
"He had a very upbeat attitude about things," Muriel said, and he loved humor, especially Ole and Lena jokes.
Curtis Hansen served in the Navy and was part of the D-Day landings at Omaha Beach in France and Okinawa in the Pacific a year later.
"He was preparing for the invasion of Japan with 70 people under his command," Muriel said. "They were told that very few of them would survive." Then the atomic bombs were dropped, bringing an end to the conflict.
The Hansens settled in Brainerd for 13 years, where Curtis developed an award-winning high school choral department that performed at state and national music conventions.