born in Lewes, DE on December 14, 1930
to Laurence and Rebecca Knapp. He was the oldest of three children,
having a sister and a brother. His early life included working on
his uncle’s farm tending the expansive fruit orchards. After
graduating from Lewes High School he
attended Cornell University, Ithaca,
NY, as a mechanical engineering student. This was the start of a
keen interest in understanding mechanical devices and how they
worked.
Ron entered West Point in July 1950. He
tolerated academics and military
training but emphasized reading and arguing with his
roommates. He wanted a career in the Air Force but did not make the
original class quota; however, an additional quota became available
late in the final semester, and Ron went Air Force. Because of the
delay in branch selection, Ron had only one uniform
available at graduation, but it was enough for his
wedding to Mathilda (Tillie) Hrupsa, which occurred just before noon
on Graduation Day in the Old Cadet Chapel. Tillie, of Felton, DE,
and Ron met while he was at USMA and she was attending nursing
college at Milford Hospital in Milford, DE. She would often hitch
rides up to West Point with other girlfriends to spend time with
Ron.
Ron went to pilot training but was
diagnosed with depth-perception problems,
which led to his transfer to navigator training and
eventual assignment to the Strategic Air Command (SAC). His primary
aircraft for most of his USAF career
was the KC-135 tanker. For much of this time he
served as a navigator instructor
and earned the Command Navigator rating. His
assignments took him, Tillie, and
family to Spence Air Force Base, Moultrie, GA;
Ellington Air Force Base, Houston,
TX; Bergstrom Air Force Base, Austin, TX; Walker Air
Force Base, Roswell, NM; Castle Air Force Base, Merced, CA; and K.I.
Sawyer Air Force Base, Gwinn, MI. Ron had a host of short- and
long-term TDY stints with tanker missions to England, Spain, Guam,
and Thailand. He served one regular tour in Vietnam away from SAC
during 1971–72, when he was aircrew on Special Operation aircraft
and was both the support squadron commander and later base commander
of Phan
Rang Air Force Base. As base commander, he was
responsible for the transition of the base to the Republic of
Vietnam Air Force as part of the United States draw down.
Ron’s military awards include the Bronze
Star Medal, the Meritorious Service Medal, the Air Medal, and the
Commendation Medal with Oak Leaf Cluster. Ron completed the
Industrial College and National Security Management courses and
earned a Master of Science degree in Aerospace Operations Management
from the University of Southern California.
After retiring from the Air Force in
1978 as a lieutenant colonel with 24 years of service, he returned
to Felton with the family. He began a second career with the
Delaware State Emergency Management Agency (DEMA). He served as the
Agency’s administrative and operations officer and was instrumental
in locating the site for and planning the construction of the
Delaware Emergency Management Operations Center near Smyrna, DE. The
agency was originally
located in modified coast artillery bunkers on the
Delaware River built in the
late 1800s. The new location was better suited for
natural disaster, and the facility was purposely built to support
the state’s residents in case of emergency. He retired from DEMA in
1994.
Ron was an able craftsman and was self
taught on a host of skills to include
carpentry, metal working, and welding. Much of the
furniture found around the
house was built by him. He learned how things worked
and easily repaired anything around the house, from appliances to
plumbing. For their retirement home, Ron built the garage and his
workshop, and finished off the second story of the main house. It
was very seldom when a repair or service person visited the Knapp
home. He also understood how cars worked. A major project was a
complete rebuild of the family station wagon’s engine, breathing new
life into an old horse. His real passion and expertise was in
gunsmithing. Throughout most of his adult life, he worked on
firearms, from making repairs for friends to machining and
assembling custom-built long rifles. This hobby was a perfect fit
for Ron’s love of the outdoors and hunting and fishing. He was a
founding member of the first local rifle range and pistol club in
his local area.
Ron’s sense of justice, fair-play, and
doing right by others was passed on to his family, as well as a
respect for nature and the environment that provides the
nation such a great bounty.
Ron was survived by Tillie after 53
years of a wonderful marriage, but on November 18, 2013 Tillie
passed to join Ron and was laid to rest next to him.
Ron was preceded in death by daughter Rebecca. He is
survived by his son, Ronald K. Knapp Jr. (USMA ’78), and his wife,
Cindy-Lee; by his daughters,
Elizabeth, and her husband, Jeff; Mary; and Ruth, and
her husband, Greg; and
by grandchildren Erin, Kathryn (USMA ’14), Jessica,
Kylie, and Matthew.
Ron had a good life that positively
impacted so many and earned from all a
“Well Done.”