Young Mike Kruse sensed an ulterior motive when his father, a Northfield firefighter, told him the department had an opening for someone to join the crew, but they had to live in the firehouse.
" ‘They’re looking for some sleepers, if you want to put your name in,’ " Kruse recalled his father saying. “I thought he was trying to kick me out of the house.”
Kruse responded to the nudge and was soon hired on May 7, 1973, at the earliest possible age of 21.
Exactly 47 years from the day he was hired, the 68-year-old Kruse will bed down for the last time in the cozy, spartan setting on the second floor above the gleaming red pumper truck that he’s operated on calls all around Northfield and surrounding communities.
There have been longer-serving firefighters who prefer to call a house their home. Last summer in Excelsior, for example, the suburban Minneapolis department honored David Hoo for his 50 years of service.
But Kruse sleeping above the job on a permanent basis since the early 1970s is exceptional.
These days, according to Mark Rosenblum, president of the Minnesota State Fire Department Association, sleepers for the most part take brief overnight stints and are most commonly found in departments serving smaller communities.
“Mankato has a program where they will hire college students to live at their fire station while going to college and train them to fight fires,” he said.