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Fred Rathert

Fred Rathert
Ministry and at the Black Gold camp near Williston. He enjoyed traveling, and he and Kathy combined their love of service and history when they journeyed to Tel Dor, Israel, in 1992 for an archaeological dig along with their daughter, Gretchen. While there, ever the devoted father, he refused the offer to trade his daughter for 50 camels. He also went on several mission trips, including to New Orleans in the wake of Hurricane Katrina and Haiti after the devastating 2010 earthquake. He will be remembered for his kindness and generosity, his integrity, his faith, his dry sense of humor and his original recipes. He is survived by his two brothers, Bill and Chuck; sister, Donna; three daughters; and numerous grandchildren. A funeral service was held Monday, Sept. 12, at the Clayton Stevenson Memorial Chapel in Wolf Point. Interment was at Greenwood Cemetery in Wolf Point. Clayton Stevenson Memorial Chapel of Wolf Point was entrusted with the arrangements.
Fred Rathert
Ministry and at the Black Gold camp near Williston. He enjoyed traveling, and he and Kathy combined their love of service and history when they journeyed to Tel Dor, Israel, in 1992 for an archaeological dig along with their daughter, Gretchen. While there, ever the devoted father, he refused the offer to trade his daughter for 50 camels. He also went on several mission trips, including to New Orleans in the wake of Hurricane Katrina and Haiti after the devastating 2010 earthquake. He will be remembered for his kindness and generosity, his integrity, his faith, his dry sense of humor and his original recipes. He is survived by his two brothers, Bill and Chuck; sister, Donna; three daughters; and numerous grandchildren. A funeral service was held Monday, Sept. 12, at the Clayton Stevenson Memorial Chapel in Wolf Point. Interment was at Greenwood Cemetery in Wolf Point. Clayton Stevenson Memorial Chapel of Wolf Point was entrusted with the arrangements.

Frederick Charles Rathert, 82, died Sept. 8, 2022, at Faith Lutheran Home in Wolf Point.

He was born in Wolf Point in 1940, the son of Francis and Charles Rathert.

He attended St. Olaf College, where he met and married Kathy Jorgenson. After graduating, the couple moved to Missoula, and he attended the University of Montana School of Law. While in Missoula, they celebrated the birth of their first daughter, Kristin.

The family moved to Williston, N.D., and he began law practice at the Bjella and Neff firm — later Bjella, Neff, Rathert, Wahl and Eiken.

They had two more daughters, Karin and Gretchen, and a plethora of pets.

He enjoyed hauling the family to horse shows and rodeos. He loved fishing. They spent much of their free time trolling for walleye, and he was a member of the Whopper Club. He was a passionate hunter. In his later years, he hauled his larger-than life goose decoys to the Montana ranch so he could snuggle inside the vinyl with his dog Red, and they would snooze between shooting at the gaggles of geese flying overhead.

He was an active member of the community and church. He was ombudsman for Bethel Lutheran Home and volunteered for the Rural Water Association and for the Medora Foundation. He was a member of Gideons. Along with Kathy, Fred led Bible studies in prisons through the Kogudus Renewal

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