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In Memory Of

Edward R. Hale, age 81, of Helena

January 29, 1941 – March 21, 2022

Edward Raymond Hale was born on January 29th, 1941, in a small house in Big Timber, the first of 3 brothers.  Family lore has it that our very mischievous Great Uncle Erwin was trying to wreak havoc right outside our grandmother’s window as she was giving birth.  Our dad was a 4th generation Montanan—his mom, Juanita Bergholm, growing up in Kalispell and then moving as a teenager to homestead with her family in Big Timber, and his dad, Raymond, being born and raised in the Big T too.

As soon as our Dad was old enough to be out on his own, as he recalled at 5 or 6 years of age, he would take off daily from his parents’ house in town and ride his bike or walk to fish the Boulder and Yellowstone Rivers.  He took advantage of every day exploring what he possibly could, and fished and trapped alongside our grandfather many a day too.  A self-described “wild child,” he roamed the landscapes of the area, building forts, shooting magpies (back in those days there was a bounty fee you could collect for doing so), and at one point accidentally setting fire to the hillside by the Big Timber Airport.  He spent ample time during his summers on a ranch near Harrison that his Aunt Adeline and Uncle Paul managed, milking cows and shearing sheep, and playing in a beautiful grove of cottonwoods that still stands today.  He spent time at the family homestead too, which is now Dornix Park just outside of Big Timber.  He did not much like school, and described himself as a poor student.  But, like everything in Dad’s life, he just got the job done.

When he was around 5 years of age, he remembers his mom taking him to the optometrist for some reason, and the optometrist told him, “You have the eyes of a pilot.”  That reverberating statement stuck with him through his childhood.  He had quite a crew of great friends from Big Timber that he kept up with throughout their lives – Steve Johnson, Buzz Mueller, Earl Bouse, Aaron Goose are some names we recall.  He graduated high school in Big Timber, and went on to college at the University of Montana where he became a lifelong, diehard Griz fan. He studied music and thought about becoming a music teacher before enrolling in the ROTC program at UM.  He was also quite active in his fraternity, the SAE.

As a fifth-year senior, he worked the railroad alongside our grandfather, and then was accepted into pilot school in the Air Force, and began his flying career.  His Air Force nickname was “Steady Eddie,” for his cool and calm demeanor in tough, volatile situations.  We are told he could always be counted on for coming up with workable solutions to difficult problems in the air, along with being a really approachable and friendly colleague.  He piloted B-52 bombers during the Southeast Asian War from Anderson AFB in Guam, Clark AFB in Okinawa, and U-Tapao Royal Thai Air Base in Thailand.  He subsequently was an instructor pilot in the F-111A at Plattsburgh AFB in NY, and served as the squadron commander for the 4007th Combat Crew Training Squadron.

Dad simply loved flying.  He even flew our family from where he was stationed in Plattsburgh, NY to Montana for our summer break in a tiny 4-seat Cessna.  We remember watching the weather, stopping at tiny grass airstrips alongside houses along the way, and Mom trying to help navigate on sheets and sheets of paper maps.

Dad married the love of his life, Donna Lee Elder, on Thanksgiving in 1970, eloping at the Chapel of the Roses in Las Vegas.  They were a wonderful match.  Our family moved around the country throughout his military career, and he served for 24 years prior to retiring in 1985 as a Lieutenant Colonel when he and Mom decided to heed the call back to their Montana roots.  He brought us to Helena, where my mom could establish her career, and he began doing construction work alongside Jim Paulson.  Dad and his brother Dennis carried on their father’s wondrous woodworking tradition.  He hunted, fished, and enjoyed every possible moment of being outdoors in his beloved Montana.  He played the valve trombone and euphonium in the State Capital Band and a number of local jazz bands, part of a long-line of Hale horn players.  He was an active member of Ducks Unlimited and Trout Unlimited for decades.  He became quite a tremendous cook, scouring his multiple subscriptions to cooking magazines and whatever he could get his hands on for ideas and recipes to tinker with.  He was also no stranger to guns, fast cars and good beer.

Our Dad was a Hale through and through, almost taciturn at times, never getting too excited about anything, always steady and always doing for his family.  He learned to downhill ski in order to teach my brother and I, and I remember him snow-plowing his way down the hill at ski races, hauling giant loads of all the kids gear on his back.  He drove us here and there and everywhere for our soccer, swimming, skiing, basketball, whatever endeavors my brother or I were involved in at the time.

He remained a loving, faithful companion to our Mom for 44 years until her death in 2018.  The last years of her life were heartbreakingly difficult, and he was her caregiver through each and every day.  Not long after her passing, he began to mention that he just felt “tired.”  It turned out that he had Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis, a steadily progressive terminal lung disease of unknown origin.  Even with that horrible diagnosis, particularly after spending years of not being out in the wilds of Montana in order to care for our Mom, he just took it in and made the best of each day that he possibly could.

He was simply the toughest man we’ve ever known.  Mixed with that toughness was this remarkable mix of humility and grace with everything that he did.  We cannot recall a time where his needs came before others.  I’m not sure we ever heard him complain; he just always got whatever done that was put before him.  Back in his air combat days, he smoked cigarettes, as a lot of the pilots did.  Being the annoying small child that I was, I would hide his cartons of cigarettes and leave him little notes in their place telling him to stop smoking.  One day soon after my campaign started he threw all the cartons away and was done smoking forever.  Just like that.

He passed peacefully in his sleep at home in the early morning of March 21st.  He is survived by his brother Dennis and our Aunt Sharon, of Astoria, Oregon.  He is also survived by his two children and their spouses, Kerry Hale and Mark Aagenes of Helena, and Riley Hale and Kristin (Ezzo) Hale of Windsor, Colorado.  He was the doting grandfather of four terrific kids: Elias, Lawson, Leighton and Riley Luna.

Our Dad instilled in our family a sense of duty, humility, and a great big giant love for the wilds of Montana.  His never-ending curiosity about the shifting landscapes, animals, birds, and natural history of this state was contagious for all of us.  He had a tremendous eye for spotting, and he never tired of taking in this land that we are so blessed to live on.  He will be profoundly and deeply missed by his family and friends.  If we could all have a little more Ed Hale in us, well, the world would be just a little better place.

In lieu of flowers, please make a donation to the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation, Ducks Unlimited, or Habitat for Humanity.  We will have a gathering for him sometime later this spring.  Please visit below and tell us a story that you remember about Ed.

Service Schedule

Services are pending at this time or no services will be held. If available, please see obituary for more information.

Service Schedule

Services are pending at this time or no services will be held. If available, please see obituary for more information.

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  1. Jim Paulsen says

    March 25, 2022 at 10:51 am

    Kerry, Riley, Dennis and family. What a wonderful reflective tribute to Big Ed. The world is a better place because of him. He was Steady Ed for sure for all of us. As a Father, husband, brother, grandfather the example he set gives us something to shoot for. I will miss him! As you mourn the loss of Ed may you draw strength that he taught each of us that shared life with him. We were the fortunate ones….. to have him in our lives. The world would be a much better place if we were more like him. Thanks for sharing him.

  2. Ann Lansing & Will Harper says

    March 27, 2022 at 9:11 am

    Kerry, Mark, Elias, and Riley,
    Wishing you peace and comfort in the arms of your family.
    Met your dad at your wedding, he was taking such good care of your mom. Hearing you talk about him over the years, what an amazing dad, grandfather, and person.
    Love,
    Ann and Will

  3. Dave Thomas says

    March 28, 2022 at 2:41 pm

    Kerry, Riley, Dennis and family: I’m so sorry for your loss. I was introduced into Ed’s orbit through music. As it happened, over the years we played music together in various groups around town, a time I’ll always cherish. He was helpful and encouraging without fail. We also were able to make music memories by attending the Northwest Big Brass Bash, until his illness prevented him from going. As the Bash’s unofficial Montana delegation he and I always tried to provide some samples of local Montana breweries, to the enjoyment of all. I am privileged to have shared a small part of his life.

  4. Marci Lynn says

    April 10, 2022 at 2:44 pm

    Very sad that my musician friend Ed Hale passed. I have some very good memories of Ed when we played together in Queen City Swing. When we played at Frontier Town about 20 years ago, he spilled coffee on one of my scores. Every time we played that song, I thought of Ed. 🙂 Thoughts and prayers for his wonderful family.

  5. William McLauchlan says

    April 16, 2022 at 7:45 am

    I write this as a remembrance of Ed Hale. I grew up one year behind Ed in Big Timber. We lived across the street from each other, in rental houses. Eventually each of our fathers built homes to which we move, in other parts of town. However, going to school meant we encountered and interacted with each other. Obvious, everyone knew everyone in Big Timber.

    The most significant thing I can remember about Ed was his musicality. He must have inherited that from his dad, Riggs. Riggs was the anchor of the Big Timber City Band, playing the bass horn throughout our youth. Ed played the baritone in the High School band, and along with his compatriot Erin Goosey on the slide trombone, made a tremendous presence in the band during my les spectacular time in the band.

    Ed, of course, went off to “Missoula,” now known as the University of Montana. He majored in music or music education, and when I followed a year later, in a much different major, we encountered each other occasionally. I knew he was in the Music School, but except for one or two occasions I never went in there.

    I remember two features of my university education that involved Ed, and now that I have retired and moved back to Missoula, I think of those occasions regularly. I now walk by the SAE fraternity house twice or three times a week. I always think of Ed and our class-mate Steve Johnson. Steve also belonged to the fraternity and his glorious 58 Chevy Bell Air two-door hardtop was our ride home for thanksgiving several times. Ed or Steve would hunt me up on campus to see if I wanted a ride “home” and we would agree on a time. There was nothing short of face-to-face contact in the early 60’s. Nothing like texting, emailing, or calling on the phone.

    The other remembrance of Ed involved our last year at the University, 1963-64. By then another Big Timberite, Earl Bouse, was living with his widowed mother after she bought a house in Missoula so he could live at home and attend college. Earl Bouse was way older than I was—2 years. However, we obviously overlapped. Earl began college “back east,” returning only after the death of his father. Ed lived with the Bouses that year as I remember it, in a little house that I now pass regularly on 5th Street in the U-District. It is a rental now and certainly shows wear and tear, but I remember walking over and sitting on the porch with Ed and Earl and discussing the state of the world. Our best conversations were about beer. I was out of that loop and could add nothing to that conversation, but they were world experts. They knew the favorite, local brands—Highlander and a real special beer—Coors. You could not get Coors in Montana, but those two knew about Coors, and claimed to have had it! Given the explosion of breweries in Montana now, I wonder what Ed and Earl would say. I still drink Highlander, still brewed locally, just out of remembrance. I always smile.

    Ed and I really never connected after he joined the Air Force and I went to graduate school. He served his country while I became an academic. He traveled the world doing exceptional things in all kinds of settings. I spent most of my adult life teaching at Purdue University in the middle of a cornfield in Indiana. The fact that when each of us could, we returned. Ed to Helena for his family. I returned to Missoula where I enjoy the place where I was educated, and where I still hear the music coming from the Recital Hall in the Music School at the University.

    Bill McLauchan

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