| Keith I. Roper
1919 - 2007
"Big man. Big Life. Beloved."
 |
y
father, Keith Irl Roper was born in the small town of Burley,
Idaho on November 12, 1919. He died April 22, 2007 at 87. He was
the middle of two brothers, Bill and Dan, who were then followed
by a sister, Joy. Born with a twinkle in the bluest of blue eyes,
he and his brothers have regaled tales of his tomfoolery as long
as I can remember. From watermelon fights to dipping a cute little
girl’s piggy tails in stinky flower water (he didn’t
know the water was putrid and he was truly sorry), whatever high
jinks were brewing, Dad was most certainly in the thick of it.
One of the things we all loved about him was he almost always
had a little something up his sleeve – and the absolute
worst at keeping it a secret! What a hoot he was!
Dad enlisted in both World War II and Korea serving with great
pride and distinction. He was a 2nd Lt. in Korea, an Intelligence
Officer assessing photos of bomb damage. He served in the 31st
Photo Rcn. Sqdn. in Normandy, northern France and central Europe.
Like many of our men who have served, he didn’t speak often
of his experiences, but one of my favorite stories is that of
my father displaying a P-38 under the Eiffel Tower at the end
of the second war. At the very epicenter of the Eiffel Tower there
is a small platform. You can stand on it and look straight up
into the dizzying array of the tower’s structure. It is
one of my favorite places in the world, partly because I can just
see my father there, and partly because my husband, Rick, indulges
me this lovely pleasure.
My life has been blessed with two great men. My father was the
first. He was honorable and hard-working, a man of clear thinking
and integrity. His steely grit, strength and determination seemed
boundless. Rick (the other great man in my life) has the honor
of being Dad’s favorite mountain climbing buddy. They’ve
spoken of their adventures over the last 35 years (and I swear
their stories keep getting bigger, better and the mountains higher)
but there were two constants. First, they always made it to the
top and second, Rick always jokingly claimed he watched my father’s
backside – both up and down – each and every time.
That so-identifiable-long-Roper stride carried my father to the
top of all 54 of Colorado’s 14’ers. Their last climb
together was Mt. Mitchell, the highest point east of the Mississippi
and Dad was 80.
Upon returning from Korea, my father earned his PhD in Chemistry
and was employed by Martin-Marietta developing the Titan missile.
He was very humble about this achievement but we secretly enjoyed
bragging that he truly WAS a rocket scientist! A magnificent mind
and independent thinker – and never one to balk at a challenge
– Dad resigned his position from Martin, became a professor
of Chemistry and purchased a 360-acre farm in Boulder, Colorado.
Not ever having farmed before and exploring new territory was
never an issue. Dad reinvented himself several times, and with
a little luck and perhaps a little touch of Midas, my father ultimately
subdivided the farm, invested in real estate and retired at 55.
Married for nearly 60 years to Ginny, they raised two daughters,
Nancy and Gina, who (in their impartial eyes) could perform wonders
in horserings. When we were little, Dad would tell us a story
in which he had rescued Mom from an Indian reservation. He, of
course, was the dashing cowboy and Mom was the desperate “Princess
Trickling Water.” I was about 10 or 11 before I figured
that one out and it makes me laugh out loud to think about it.
Their labor of love and devotion helped mold their family for
three generations.
Other members of Dad’s family with fond and loving memories:
Granddaughters Kelly and “Jeffy,” who will long remember
their “Pop-Pop” for his crazy-wild wheelbarrow rides
and convinced them he was the guy who made the moon whole every
month; his first great-grandchild, Cheyanne, who had the good
fortune to be a little blue-eyed girl with blonde piggy tails
and he got to fall in love all over again; Jackson, with whom
he would sit next to for hours and comfort; Taylor, who just might
become the pilot he once dreamed to be; Alec, with his amazing
quickness and mind for numbers; and Tucker, the last little fellow
to capture his heart and, with the wisdom of a 3-year old, believes
that Pop-Pop is on the moon.
Andy, my daughter Jenn’s husband, won my father over with
his homemade biscuits and Dad took such a shine to Kelly’s
husband, Brannon, that he kept asking what was taking him so long
to propose (he never was one to mince words).
This family is my father’s – our – richest
legacy and we are all proud to claim his blood.
I think it is so fitting that my dad’s last great adventure
is aboard a rocket named The Explorers Flight and look forward
to its launch.
He makes me smile when I think of him, but I miss him. I always
will. We all will.
Big man. Big life. Beloved.
With love,
Gina
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