Frank J. Ney

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Frank J. Ney (May 12, 1918November 24, 1992) was a mayor of Nanaimo, British Columbia, Canada, serving for twenty-one years. Ney also served a term as a member of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia. He was known for his outgoing personality, his habit of attending civic events and dressing up like a pirate for the appearances, and playing a central role in initiating the bathtub races across Georgia Strait from Nanaimo to Vancouver. He was father to eleven children with his first wife, Jocelyn (Floyer). He was an active skier, swimmer, and boater.

[edit] Biography

Born in London, England, Ney served in the RAF and RCAF as a pilot during World War II. He was a resident of Nanaimo from 1946 until his death in 1992. He was Mayor of Nanaimo from 1968 to 1984, and 1987 to 1990, and a Social Credit Member of the Legislative Assembly for Nanaimo from 1969 to 1972.

Ney was also a member of the Society of Notaries Public of British Columbia from January, 1956, until his death in November 1992, and had a very busy notarial practice in Nanaimo. He was President of the Society from 1968-1969.

Ney, with his brother Bill, formed the Great National Land and Investment Corporation in 1964, was involved in real estate (as President of Nanaimo Realty Ltd.), and promoted the economic development of Vancouver Island. He is perhaps most famous for the purchase and subdividion of Protection Island in 1960 and selling it under the guise of a pirate-promotion theme.

He participated in many local and provincial associations, and was Chairman of the Nanaimo Centennial Committee (1967), responsible for organizing the inaugural Great Bathtub Race [1] between Nanaimo and Vancouver. He was the first Chairman and Admiral of the Loyal Nanaimo Bathtub Society, established in 1968 to continue the bathtub race as an annual event. Ney was made Freeman of the City of Nanaimo in 1984. He died on November 24, 1992.

A bronze statue of Ney is sited at Swy-a-Lana Lagoon in downtown Nanaimo [2].

An extensive archive relating to Ney's personal and professial life are held in the Frank. J. Ney fonds at the Nanaimo Community Archives.

A short biography about Frank Ney, based mainly on collected remembrance and stories about Ney, was published by Paul Gogo in 1995 (Frank Ney: A Canadian Legend).

A satirical musical review built around Ney's "Pirate Frank" persona premiered at Nanaimo's Western Edge Theatre in March 2007.

A play about him (Being Frank, by writer G. Kim Blank) was performed at the Port Theatre in Nanaimo in April 2007, produced by TheatreOne and directed by Burton Lancaster; there is also a book by Blank based on the play entitled Being Frank, from which the following portrayal of Ney's character is given:

" . . . you watch Frank, but you don’t necessarily understand Frank, or even keep up with him. . . . what is immediately apparent is how many people will go on record to say they were “good friends” of Frank, though no one on the planet could have that many 'good friends.' But the effect he had on people, the way he moved around, his outward nature, his ability to be everywhere and always visible, the twinkle in his eye and the blarney of his gesture—all of this must have made him feel like everyone’s friend. Yet, despite this—and here is where his wonderfully maddening complexity sets in—those closest to him inevitably said something much more intriguing: they didn’t really know him; they didn’t really know what moved him forward and what made him tick, what got him going in the morning and kept him up at night." [From the Preface to Being Frank, pages 9-11]

[edit] Trivia

  • In 2005, a newspaper poll declared Ney as "The Greatest Nanaimoite." Frank Ney's long association with Nanaimo lead to the term "Neynaimo."
  • The phrase "the full Nanaimo" has come to refer a certain style of dress associated with the male business community in Nanaimo dating in the 1960-1980s, and is often associated with Frank Ney. This dress style often features white patent leather shoes and a white belt, and sometimes with plaid pants or sports jacket, or with the fortrel leisure suit of this era.
  • Because of the famous bathtub race, as well as Nanaimo's central location on Vancouver Island, and its numerous pubs in the old City, Nanaimo is sometimes referred to as "the hub, pub, and tub city."