Details

Collection: FND001 - SHSND Foundation - North Dakota Heritage Family Memorial Program
Series: Tribute
Folder: DIG
Item: 271737
Title: Ronald E. Qualley
Date: 3/14/1948-7/20/2025
Creator:
Inscription/Marks: 3/14/1948
Summary: Ronald Ernest Qualley, 77, of Ray, ND, passed away peacefully at Trinity Hospital in Minot, ND, on July 20, 2025. His loving wife, Katie, and his four daughters were by his side when he passed. His funeral was held July 26, 2025, at the Ray Lutheran Church. Burial was in the Rainbow Valley Cemetery, Ray. He was an affectionate, dedicated and incredibly hard-working father, son, brother, uncle, grandfather, and husband, who was called to Heaven too soon. Ron was born in Williston, ND, on March 14, 1948, to Ernest and Marie (Binde) Qualley. He was raised on the Qualley farm in rural Ray as the second oldest of five kids. Ron went to school in a one-room country schoolhouse in the Rainbow Valley north of Ray through 8th grade (he bragged that he was valedictorian of his 8th grade class of 2 students with a C average), proceeded on to school in town, and graduated from Ray High School in 1966. After high school, Ron went to college for about a year and a half, moved to Williston, and continued to live there working trucking jobs until 1972, all while still coming home on the weekends to help his dad on the farm. The big bonus of coming home on the weekends was that he was able to see Katie and take her out on dates, which he looked forward to so much. Ron and Katie met at a dance in the summer of 1970 in Wildrose, ND. Katie recalls, “When we locked eyes, that’s all it took. We danced and fell in love.” Ron and Katie were married on March 9, 1973, in Billings, MT. Ron had to work on the night of their wedding driving truck, so Katie hopped in the truck with him and they had their honeymoon on the road. Katie wouldn’t have had it any other way. They were too in love to care how they spent their time together. Ron and Katie lived in Billings, where they raised their four daughters, Deanna, Cheryl, Erika and Laura. When people would ask him about having all girls, he would respond that he loved it because he “got all the attention!” While it is impossible to pick a quick memory for any of the daughters, they will try: • Deanna “banana” watched the Alien trilogy with dad, he would take her to the hardware store, and later she taught him how to play chess, but he eventually dominated and beat her at it every time. • Cheryl “barrell” remembers roughhousing with Dad too many times to count, and her 13th birthday when he took her on a daddy-daughter date out to dinner and a movie. • Erika “America born in America” remembers sitting up late at night eating cereal after dad came home from a few days away at work, and later as a young adult, hiking on the western slope of Colorado with him. • Laura “pequora from the city of Medora” loved sitting on dad’s lap getting backrubs while watching “Zoro,” “Walker Texas Ranger” and UFO documentaries. Ron was a truck driver for 35 years, with an impressive four million safe driving miles (that is an equivalent of driving around the world 160 times). Ron drove over 25 years for Consolidated Freight Ways and Roadway Express until his retirement in 2007. He liked being on the road. He listened to books-on-tape, ate peanut-butter-and-honey sandwiches and raw vegetables Katie packed for him, and just enjoyed the solitude and independence of being an over-the-road trucker. Once they retired, Ron and Katie loved to travel. They were snowbirds, traveling to Texas and Arizona during the winter months. They learned how to square dance and they even graduated square dancing class. Ron was so excited to call his daughters with the revelation that he no longer had two left feet! Sometimes they would spend weeks driving the coastlines for a change of scenery. While traveling to those warmer states, they met an incredible number of wonderful friends that they treasure to this day. While spending summers at the farm, Ron and Katie enjoyed playing cribbage, going to concerts, fairs, the Norsk Hostfest, eating lefse and lutefisk, and spending time with their loved ones in the area. Ron treasured his five grandchildren: Gabrielle (20), Carter (19), Jonah (16), Hazel (15), and Everett (11). He loved sharing root beer floats, taking them to Costco to share pizza and ice cream after shopping, and most of all, giving them “whisker rubs.” When his grandkids would come to the farm, he would be overjoyed to teach them how to drive, mow the lawn, drive the tractors and 4-wheelers, and the overall ropes of farm life. If he was still here with us, all they would say is “thank you for everything.” The grandkids had the best grandfather they could have asked for, and he will leave a lasting imprint on their lives forever. Ron will be dearly missed by his wife, Kathleen “Katie” (Weyrauch); his daughters, Deanna Bergum (Derek), of Billings, MT, Cheryl Swanson (Kyle), of Longmont, CO, Erika Schall (Jeramie), of Dacono, CO, and Laura Sanderson (Peter), of Billings, MT; as well as his two sisters, Sandra Hall (Len), of Whitefish, MT, and Sharlene Jonson (Eric), of Snohomish, WA; along with his before-mentioned grandchildren, many nieces, nephews, cousins and countless numbers of incredible friends, new and old. He was preceded in death by his parents, Ernest and Marie (Binde) Qualley; his brother, Darrell, and his brother, Lyle (Patti).
Red ID: FND_I_79232 Image ID: 531295 Image Notes: FND001 271737

Collection: FND001 Digitized Images from Collection
Title: SHSND Foundation - North Dakota Heritage Family Memorial Program
Date: -

Summary: The North Dakota Heritage Family Memorial Program is sponsored by the North Dakota Funeral Directors Association. The life stories of deceased North Dakotans are featured in an archvied collection. Current partners in the project are Eastgate Funeral & Cremation Services, Bismarck Evans Funeral Homes, Carrington and New Rockford Everson-Coughlin Funeral Home, Williston Fulkerson Funeral Home, Tioga Fulkerson Funeral Home, Watford City Fulkerson Stevenson Funeral Home, Williston Nero Funeral Home, Bottineau Parkway Funeral Service, Bismarck Springan Stevenson Funeral Home, Stanley Stevenson Funeral Home, Dickinson These funeral homes provide recent obituaries to the Foundation, where staff and volunteers format, edit and archive each memorial. The memorials are posted, and copies are sent to the family for their input and approval. The listing currently features more than 13,000 memorials, and is constantly updated as new memorials and histories are received.

Enter a subject or term in one or both of the “Search” boxes.

  • “Item Detail” searches the Title, Creator and Summary fields of all item-level records.
  • “Collection Number” searches the Collection Number field only and requires an exact match.

The “DETAILS” button provides additional information about an item, as well as the following options:

  • “Collection Summary” details the contents of the entire collection in which the selected item is located.
  • You can print the image and its corresponding details by selecting “Print".
  • “Digitized Images from the Collection” returns a list of all digitized items within that collection (available from the “Collection Summary” screen).

Click on image to expand/zoom the image view.

“Photobook home” takes you back to the main Photobook page where you can start a new search.

“Featured Collections” showcases new and/or popular collections and the digitized images within those collections.


Information on how to order copies is located here.

The collections preserved in the North Dakota State Archives include over a million images. Only a small percentage of these images have been digitized. This photo gallery provides a preview of the images that have been digitized.

For more information on the non-digitized images, please refer to the finding aids found on our website at history.nd.gov, or ask a member of our reference staff for assistance.