Miami Herald (Sunday)

Francis “Frank” Bach March 24, 1938 - January 24, 2023

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family moved to West Palm Beach. Daughter Jennifer and twins Kevin and Keith were all born in South Florida.

Frank initially supported the family in Florida as a representa­tive for Revlon; Wanda worked as a waitress at Manero’s Restaurant. Frank also worked for a cabinet shop, selling and making cabinets, working with his brother-in-law Gary Mcdeavitt to install them. Other business ventures included raising cattle and horses on 10 acres in Jupiter, and investing in a funeral home and cemetery. Frank also served as a rural mail carrier for the Post Office for 30 years while pursuing his other ventures, demonstrat­ing his work ethic, providing a solid foundation for the family of six.

Adept at time management, Frank enrolled at Florida Atlantic, using his GI bill benefits and hard work to graduate with a double major in business and psychology. He decided not to pursue his law school plans when Wanda developed health issues.

Wanda passed away in 1994 following a kidney/ pancreas transplant and less than optimum care; after litigation to uncover the cause of Wanda’s death, daughters Michelle and Jennifer started playing Cupid between their father and his attorney, Karen Gievers, whose husband Joe had been killed in 1987 while training for a triathlon, leaving her a widow with two children, Dan and Donna.

Frank and Karen married on a Sunday in November, 1997 creating a blended family of six children, and some grandchild­ren. During 1998, the newlyweds traveled the state as Karen ran for Secretary of State, with Frank a key part of the campaign, with “campaign brothers” Mike Lamonica and Steve Beasley. Many voters lived in retirement communitie­s, where married voters counted their years of marriage in decades. Karen and Frank became known as the couple that counted their anniversar­ies by the number of weeks since their 1997 wedding, with voters asking “How many weeks has it been?” and enjoying hearing the answer change weekly.

Following the campaign, Frank and Karen moved to Tallahasse­e. Frank enjoyed being the videograph­er with Karen’s law firm and helping with the cases. In 2010, Frank served as chief campaign manager for Karen’s circuit judge run which resulted in a victory. They enjoyed many wonderful friendship­s along the way, including with George and Marianne Brown and the magical “Monday Night Dinner Group of Lakeshore Drive”.

Before Karen’s birthday in 2019 made her too old to continue as a judge, Frank served as a volunteer during a courthouse “active shooter” exercise, again helping make a difference as the court staff had to pay attention to the effect of his age and knee replacemen­ts made during the exercise’s evacuation of spectators from the courtroom.

Frank and Karen also enjoyed traveling in their spare time, at times taking grandchild­ren with them on special grandparen­t bonding trips or visiting family and friends around the country. Frank participat­ed as vigorously as possible in activities while traveling to their diverse travel destinatio­ns. thoroughly enjoying singing traditiona­l Irish music with the Mcdeavitts during troubadour Danny Doyle’s tour of Ireland in 2000. Later, inspired by Frank Buck in a south Africa culture center near Johannesbu­rg, Frankie volunteere­d to demonstrat­e a short saber-like weapon in what was supposed to be a fake skirmish with a Zulu warrior. Unaware of the nearby live microphone, he got into character, challengin­g the warrior while convincing­ly waving the weapon. Concerned about Frank’s intensity, Zulu elders retrieved the sharp weapon from Frank, replacing it with a less dangerous one to complete the demonstrat­ion, fortunatel­y without injury to anyone.

In a Kenyan Masai village, the Chief let Frank sit in the only chair in the village as they bargained over the price to be paid pay for handmade Masai souvenirs, with the help of college-educated Jonathan who was showing the tribe how the souvenir business could generate funds for a community well, so the Masai women would not need to walk miles for water.

The adventures were amazing and thoroughly enjoyable. Kangaroos, koalas, the Great Barrier Reef, Tasmanian devil dogs and boomerang throwing in Australia, sheep ranches, Milford Sound, and the Pavlova desserts in New Zealand, interactin­g with the people encountere­d along the way, all were special.

Naturally outgoing, and believing that everyone had a story, Frank loved to talk and interact, with an engaging twinkle in his eyes, and interest in everything experience­d.

Seeing Frank enjoying driving on the speed-limit-free autobahns in Europe was beyond descriptio­n. Also amazing was being able to rendezvous with Patricia Allen’s son George and his family in Prague, where George was teaching photograph­y at a university.

Frank was selected for a one-day Honor Flight from Tallahasse­e to Washington, D.C. with other veterans and their guardians; being able to share the adventure with a grandson, and a long-time friend and his son made the recognitio­n even more appreciate­d.

Other trips remained on the bucket list as Frank’s health declined and covid isolation hit. Frank loved watching M.A.S.H. reruns on television, seeing the hills that he had seen years earlier in Korea. His fading short-term memory allowed him to forget episodes previously seen, and brought back his years’ earlier memories of his actual time in the Air Force.

Frank remained a member of the Capital City Kiwanis Club and the Tallahasse­e Lions Club until he passed, participat­ing in activities helping the homeless at Grace Mission and packing food at Second Harvest for children to have something to eat during weekends and summers. He believed in random acts of kindness to leave things better than he found them, and appreciate­d the many blessings received.

Frank and Karen’s 1,312 week anniversar­y occurred the Sunday before Frank’s death.

Frank is survived by wife Karen Gievers Bach, their six children Michelle (Kevin), Jennifer (Sue), Kevin (Heather), Keith, Dan, and Donna (Oney), 11 grandchild­ren Scott (Joy), Steven (Hannah), John, Katie (Ryan), Adam (Taryn), Austin, Steven, Jacob, Jessica, Emilie and Alex, 13 greatgrand­children Johnay, Jaxon, Shyla, A.J. Jr., Ariah, Angel, Wyatt, Walker, Adeline, Rory, Miles, Grace and Remy.

Frank’s parents, his older sister Kathy and younger brother David predecease­d him. Frank is survived by three younger sisters Nancy (Pat), Peggy and Linda (Marc), two younger brothers Bob (Shelley) and Kenny, brother-in-law Gary (Liz), Aunt Ruth, numerous nieces, nephews, cousins and others on the Bach side, Aunt Mary and numerous cousins on the Minch side. On Wanda’s side, Frank is survived by brother-in-law Tom (Pat) and other relatives, and, on the Gievers side, by Karen’s sisters Sue (Jim), Nanci (Terry) and Lisa (Grant) and numerous nieces, nephews, cousins and others.

To know Frank was to feel that you were part of his family. He took time to talk with folks, not at them, helping them feel important; he would be the first to offer any help needed. In lieu of flowers, and in memory of Frank, the family suggests donations to favorite charities, or random acts of kindness to help make things better.

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