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Roy Knepper


Roy Knepper

Veterans Funeral Care Roy Knepper

Roy Allen Knepper, 89, of Dunedin, FL funeral services are 12:30 PM, January 9, 2009 at Florida National Cemetery, 6502 SW 102nd Avenue, Bushnell, FL with Captain Art Nave and the Marion County Military Honor Guard, to officiate.   He will be laid to rest with his wife, Nellie Opal Knepper, who died on March 23, 2008.

 
For the first time in our life, we’ll celebrate Father’s Day this year without our dad. The person who had the most influence on the people we became passed away on January 4, 2009. Roy Knepper was 89.
 
It has been said that the loss of a parent is one of life’s most traumatic events.  We now know the devastating truth of that statement.  We’ve been told that in time the hurt will fade, only to be replaced by positive memories that soothe the soul.  Already, we can feel that happening.
 
Our father was a remarkably good man, like many of the inspiring role models and mentors who all too infrequently appear in our lives. Like them, he was a person of devotion and integrity, a man who understood a hard day’s work. Yet, unlike many of them, he never had the advantage of a college education. He worked pretty much his entire life in two places: as a young man he joined the Army Air Corps where he served during WW II, and later as a painting contactor in Dunedin, Florida. This would pretty much sum up his livelihood, but not his life.
 
Dad loved baseball. And to steal a line from the Billy Crystal movie City Slickers, “Even when we couldn’t find anything to talk about, we could always talk about baseball.” Our father grew up playing baseball on the sandlots and high school fields of Wichita, Kansas before he joined the military. He then played ball for the Army and was later picked up by the Brooklyn Dodgers organization. He played for their minor league team in Florida, The Miami Sun Sox. Dad played in the Cuban International League and just last year we were able to get a copy of his baseball card from a dealer in south Florida. 
 
There are not many young men from the Dunedin area where we grew up that didn’t know Dad from either Little League or Babe Ruth League. He coached and managed ball teams from the early 60’s to the early 80’s. It’s where he earned his nickname "Roy da Boy" from one of his many players. Yes, he helped a lot of young boys including his sons develop life skills through the joy of a summer game. 
 
 
In his retirement our father enjoyed his grandchildren Eric, Alex, Morgan, and Novalee. He enjoyed watching the Rays and the Braves on TV. And he loved a family visit, especially from his only daughter.
 
We will bury our father on Friday. He was the last one to leave the field of life as he survived his brother Bill and his sister Virginia. And last Easter he said goodbye to his wife Nellie of nearly 50 years. Our brother joked about how mom’s probably nagging dad in heaven with, "What took you so long, Roy?"
 
The older we get the more all us realize how much we are like our father. And the more we realize that, the more we know it is, by and large, a good thing. We will miss our father deeply and although he didn’t leave us with riches, he left us rich with thought and memories.
 
 
We love you, Pop. Thank you for everything.
 
Rocky, Ronnie, Melody, and Dave

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