Military historian and arms collector
Fred Ropkey died this past week. He opted out of medical treatments that might
have prolonged his life for a few months. After 84 years, he was not
surrendering. He simply wanted to walk headlong into the truth.
Fred’s collection of arms grew over the years, and he stowed his thousands of acquisitions on the sprawling 100 acres of family land (dating back to the Great Depression) on the northwest side of Indianapolis. At the time, says his longtime mechanic Skip Warvel, the idea was to simply find a place to restore those treasures. But it was really more a warehouse than a showcase. So in 2005, Fred moved everything to Crawfordsville, signaling a new vision and purpose. “Build it and they will come,” his wife Lani recalls him saying. Then he added: “Who would think that a little pole barn on a 50-acre cornfield in Crawfordsville could change so many lives?” It was no longer simply a standing building; it was a building that stood for something. He called it the Ropkey Armor Museum.
Once it opened, Fred and Lani fully realized the impact the collection
had on people. “Are you familiar with that tank?” he once asked an older man
who was examining the vehicle. “I practically lived in it,” said the WWII
veteran who revealed that he had not seen his “old girl” in 40 years. “Thank
you,” he said to Fred. “My life has now come full circle.” Later, according to
Fred, the veteran retreated to a hotel room with a bottle of bourbon and wrote
an entire account of his experiences, those notes now part of the museum’s Wall
of Heroes.
To the end, Fred loved digging into history, uncovering the
human stories behind each piece he salvaged. He found tanks, aircraft, even
parts of ships in barns or buried underground, where the government had discarded them. Fred was always mystified by the lack
of appreciation for these historical artifacts. “We can fix that,” he would say
to Skip. The mission was simple: No matter the degree of disrepair, it was an
obligation to resurrect the piece, honoring those who had lived and died in it.
“Everything in the museum runs, flies, or floats, but the cannons don’t fire,”
says Warvel, who uses the original spec manuals to make repairs.
Over the years, I was honored to be Fred’s friend. We toured
both facilities on a number of occasions for television segments on WISH-TV.
I’ve ridden in Sherman Tanks and sailed around a lake on a Vietnam-War-era
vintage patrol boat. I will miss Fred. I won’t miss the harrowing ride in a
Russian biplane.
Fred Ropkey could converse knowledgeably (and endlessly) about
every U.S. combat mission in WWII. At the end of Fred’s life, he chose not to
share his plight with others, instead enduring his cancer pain privately.
This was the one battle Fred Ropkey did not want to talk
about.
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