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World War II vet turning 100 reflects on century at the frontlines of America

"They all thought I was nuts."

In the 1960s, jogging was not something people did. But in his own quiet way, Emil Garippo has been at the front lines of change, challenge and progress in America for almost 100 years.

On April 1, that almost will become an exactly.

Still exercising five days a week, Emil Garippo looks back on the remarkable century he's encountered.

"It's been a good life," he says in his typically understated tone. "Very good."

Never planning to be a trendsetter, he has seen and led transformations for decades.

A young Emil Garippo, at left, with his mother Jesse, brother Mike, and sister Thomasine. Courtesy of Garippo family

Emil was born in the small flat his parents rented in a poor Little Italy neighborhood, where the University of Illinois/Chicago now sits. The families of both his parents had recently immigrated to the U.S.

Despite the Great Depression bearing down, he recalls an active, happy life growing up. Playing at Hull House and outdoors, long swims out in Lake Michigan, ballgames with his father where he saw Babe Ruth hit a homer, going home "only to sleep."

There were the summers at Bowen County Club for underprivileged children. His older brother Mike - a natural leader, Emil says - was head counselor, guiding and supporting the younger children. Back home, Mike looked after Emil and their new sister, Thomasine.

Emil was 18 when bombs began falling on Pearl Harbor. First, his brother Mike was sent off, taken from college. Emil's time to serve came soon after.

Sgt. Emil Garippo served as a medic during World War II, landing at Normandy beaches less than two weeks after D-Day. Courtesy of Garippo family

In mid-June 1944, he arrived in mainland Europe. Normandy.

Downed airplanes with bodies still inside spread along Omaha Beach.

Sergeant Garippo then became D+13, military lingo for how long after the D-Day invasion he arrived. As a medic, he still vividly recalls details from the hundreds of bodies he pulled from swamps and fields as he moved east with the military. As well as the camaraderie and tightness that bonded his unit of 12 comrades.

Brothers Emil and Mike wrote each other often. But in December 1944, word came.

Mike's courage had led to the capture of 30 German soldiers before he was taken down by enemy fire. He would be awarded the Silver Star, the highest medal for valor not unique to a specific branch. Emil visited his brother's grave in Holland twice, hitching rides to get there.

Returning to America, he suffered nightmares. But, he says, you just carried on.

Not long after returning from World War II, Emil Garippo met Dean, the visiting niece of a neighbor and they soon got married. For their 50th anniversary, he wrote her a poem calling their union "both adventurous and serene." Courtesy of Garippo family

In the "old neighborhood," Emil had met the visiting niece of a neighbor. Soon he and Dean Rugg were married.

Their son was among the first Baby Boomers. His name: Michael. In the year of his birth, 1948, the family brought the body of his namesake back home to Chicago.

Following his brother's lead, Emil entered college. He graduated with an education degree from DePaul University in 1949, later earning his Master's. Doing so, he became among the earliest Americans to benefit from the GI Bill and the first in his family with a college degree.

He started teaching in Chicago, rising to assistant principal of Spalding High, one of the nation's first public schools for children with disabilities. Seeing his talent, the administration brought Emil to the central office to help oversee citywide transportation.

A Garippo family photo from 1972 showing, clockwise from top left, Mike, Emil, Debbie, Dean and Deanna. Courtesy of Garippo family

Two daughters came, Deanna then Debbie. Emil befriended a builder who suggested the young family move to then far-off Elmhurst.

He again uses "nuts" to describe the reactions of most others to the plan. The area was prairie with just some anticipant roads and sidewalk.

But for $11,000 in 1951, he bought his first house there. And within a few years, much of his extended family followed, including his parents and his sister's family.

Today, the generations of relatives living in the area thanks to Emil Garippo would be hard to count.

Warned he had a weak heart in the 1960s, Emil read a magazine article that extolled jogging for everyday Americans. Wearing tennis shoes and no special gear, he began running along the local streets, to the astonishment of many of the neighbors.

Emil still works out daily, giving himself only weekends off.

Twenty minutes on his stationary bike, then a series of yoga-like exercises. He has never undergone surgery and started using a walker and hearing aids only in the last few years.

But Emil is no health purist. Before dinner, you might see him today mixing a perfect vodka martini.

Into his late 90s, Emil Garippo was his wife Dean's primary daily caregiver for almost 20 years as she struggled with dementia until her death in 2020. Courtesy of Garippo family

Emil's children talk about the enduring love and support of their parents. In the summers, the family drove literally everywhere in America, to all 50 states.

Laughing at the memory, they even recall their dad driving the big family Oldsmobile through Mexico to Acapulco.

Emil and Dean were married 74 years. On their 50th anniversary, he wrote a poem calling their union "both adventurous and serene."

For most of their last 20 years together, Dean suffered dementia. Emil acted as primary daily caregiver until she passed away at age 96 in late 2020.

Emil watches the news and sports every day in the Bloomingdale home the couple purchased 35 years ago.

But mostly he enjoys time with his children, four grandchildren, and now two great-grandchildren.

For little Dylan and Beau he says, "I just want them to have a good life and do the right things."

Emil Garippo with his first great-grandchild, Dylan, in 2019. The couple have four grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. Courtesy of Garippo family

Emil doesn't boast or call attention to himself. But when you talk with him about his life, a playful smile emerges and he admits it. "I'm always the first guy to do everything."

And looking back at the past century: "Everything was beautiful and dangerous and good."

Birthday bashes for Emil Garippo are planned for April 1 and April 4 in DuPage County.

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