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Builder Ralph Manley, 80, Re-enacts D-Day Jump Over Normandy

On Sunday, June 6, Ralph Manley, a former World War II paratrooper and now retired hometown builder from Springfield, MO, jumped out of a vintage C-47 transport plane over the skies of Normandy — much like he did 60 years ago at the start of D-Day.

Manley wore his old 101st Airborne Division uniform, which still fit, but there were several major differences between last weekend’s jump and his jump in 1944.

One difference, of course, was age. Manley is 80, a very fit 80, but 80 nonetheless. He was 20 when he made his D-Day jump.

Another was that Sunday’s jump was a reenactment, part of the 60th anniversary celebration of the historic D-Day invasion of World War II. Manley parachuted as the “senior” member — about 45 years senior to the oldest of the other members — of the Continental Airborne reenactment team based in Oklahoma.

He also jumped in broad daylight. And nobody was shooting at him.

Sixty years ago, Manley parachuted under fire into occupied France in the middle of the night — 12:23 a.m. His plane had been hit and was burning and he was able to parachute out at 300 feet, just before the transport crashed, killing 13 of his comrades.

Manley leaped out of the plane loaded down with more than 230 pounds of gear and munitions — gear that weighed more than he did — 50 pounds of explosives, several anti-tank mines, grenades, a flamethrower, K rations, chocolate bars, a medical kit and more. “We had to take all the things we might need with us,” Manley says.

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Manley was a demolitions expert, and he and his fellow soldiers parachuted behind enemy lines to delay any German reinforcements that might try to reach the Normandy beachhead once the invasion began. They mined key roadway intersections, disrupted enemy communications, disabled German pillboxes and prepared bridges for demolition.

Manley was given a Purple Heart and awarded a Bronze Star for his service and valor that day. During the course of the war, he was wounded six times, fought and got frostbite in the Battle of the Buldge, and was awarded four additional Purple Hearts and another Bronze Star before returning to the States in November 1945 aboard a hospital ship.

A Budding Building Career

After the war, Manley didn’t venture too far from home. He attended Drury College in Springfield on the G.I. Bill, married his wife, Jayne, and became a builder — slowly, the way it was done in the late '40s and early '50s. “I wanted to build my own home, and after it was finished, someone wanted to buy it,” Manley said. So he sold it for $1,500 and built another.

The money was good, so he kept building homes. He built two-bedroom homes back then, no garages and maybe two or three outlets in a room. “I kept building homes, and if someone wanted to buy the home I lived in, I would sell it and build another. That’s what we did then,” he said.

From this one-man shop, the business grew, his homes got more luxurious and he became a fairly substantial builder/developer in the Springfield area. By the time he retired five years ago, Ralph K. Manley & Company had developed 18 subdivisions and built 2,000 homes, mostly single-family, but also duplexes and apartments. “In my biggest year, we built 100 homes,” he said.

Along the way, two of his three daughters followed him into the business. They both now have their own building companies.

Manley was a charter member of the Home Builders Association of Greater Springfield, the local association he helped found in 1954. In the ensuring years, he was the association’s president three different times and remains an active member today.

“Ralph never misses our monthly membership meetings,” said Matt Morrow, the association’s executive officer. “He always introduces our guests because he does it so well. Ralph’s a completely unique individual.”

Though Manley is retired from the industry, he is in no way “retired.” He has been a member of  Springfield's city council for five years and currently serves as the mayor pro tem. In fact, he’s been active in city politics for quite some time.

“I’ve been on the zoning and planning commission and I’ve helped with the building codes,” Manley said. “You want to be able to contribute.”

Calendar Guy

Manley didn’t bat an eye when Charlyce Ruth, the association’s office manager, asked him to participate in a project to raise money for community charities in 2003. Her idea was to create a “Home Builders Hunks” calendar with each month dedicated to a different charity and featuring a builder pictured in a pose that reflects his off-the-job interests.

Manley was Mr. February and posed jumping out of a small airplane for the American Diabetes Association. Ten of the 12 builders posed shirtless. Manley wasn’t one of them.

That might have been because that year, he also had the multipurpose room in the elementary school he attended as a youngster named after him. Going shirtless probably wasn’t appropriate for the councilman.

“Ralph is a great example to the rest of us,” said Morrow. “He was a war hero who came back to build a very successful business, literally from the ground up. And on top of that, he gives so much back to the community. He’s the personification of the American dream.”

Said Manley, “If I were a young man today just out of college, I’d do the same thing all over again.”

To read the recent story about Ralph Manley, "A heavy place in a light heart," that appeared in the Sunday edition of the Springfield News-Leader, click here.

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