Marrion "Billie" Walsh

marrion walsh

August 1, 1924 ~ October 8, 2025

Born in: Devils Lake, North Dakota
Resided in: Moorhead, Minnesota

Marrion’s funeral service will be livestreamed below on Saturday, October 18, 2025 at 10:00AM.

Marrion Emily (Jahnke) Walsh

Marrion Emily (Jahnke) Walsh, affectionately called “Billie” by many, was born on August 1, 1924, in Devils Lake, North Dakota, to Charles and Mary (Wilkins) Jahnke. She grew up in Rock Lake with her four sisters, where her father owned the Jahnke Brothers General Store. Proud of her hometown roots, Marrion often recalled waiting on customers at the store and spending joyful summers at the family cabin at Lake Upsilon—always bringing along a gallon of yellow paint to freshen things up.

Marrion was well-educated, adventurous, and independent. After graduating high school in 1942, she attended college in Aberdeen, Washington, before enlisting in the U.S. Navy with her best friend from Rock Lake. She served in the Bronx, New York, Georgia, Mississippi, and New Orleans. Known for her tall stature and quick wit, she once volunteered to clean the highest area of the women’s quarters, assuming “no one would look up there, anyway.” To her dismay, Eleanor Roosevelt, also a tall women, conducted a white-glove inspection and found dust on top of the door frames. The entire unit was confined to quarters for “dust on the overhead.” Marrion’s role as a Navy Storekeeper Dispersing 1st Class Petty Officer meant she was responsible for making sure sailors were paid—making her very popular. She often said, “We wanted to be participants, not onlookers, in the most momentous event of our time.” She remained deeply proud of her WWII service and her country.

After the Navy, Marrion cared for her parents until their deaths, then returned to North Dakota State University to complete both her bachelor’s and master’s degrees. She began a long and impactful teaching career in history and geography at Ben Franklin Junior High in Fargo. Known as “strict but fair,” she told students each first day: “Today will be your hardest day because I’m going to tell you my expectations. After that, we’ll get along just fine.” And they did!

Her dedication to education earned her fellowships at the University of Maryland, Colorado State, and the University of Minnesota. Later, she was awarded a Fulbright Fellowship to teach at Winckley Convent School in Lancashire, England. She cherished the moment a nun rushed in to tell her that all her students had passed their exams and would go on to college. During her time abroad, she made lifelong friends, traveled widely, and even attended a royal garden party, where she was presented to the Queen Mother and Margaret Thatcher. Her students proudly taught her how to curtsey—complete with white gloves and a proper hat, which has since become a piece of family legend.

In Fargo, Marrion met Dr. Frederick Walsh, and the two married on June 6, 1981. They shared a passion for travel and conversation, wintering in Florida and exploring the world together. They visited Australia, New Zealand, Hong Kong, Britain, Malaysia, Singapore, and all 50 U.S. states. A waitress once remarked how delightful it was to watch them because they were “so interested in each other and had so much to talk about.”

Beyond teaching, Marrion had many interests: Western history, reading, camping, needlework, genealogy, visiting family, and even digging for dinosaur bones on a friend’s ranch in North Dakota. She was active at the First Congregational United Church of Christ and with the Family History Workshops at Minnesota State University Moorhead, where she gave many Round Table presentations. In 2017, she joined other veterans on an Honor Flight to Washington, D.C., and at age 93, she proudly threw out the first pitch at a Fargo RedHawks baseball game.

Marrion often said she had “a life well-lived.” Her sister once summed it up perfectly: “Every family should have a Billie.”

Marrion passed away on October 8, 2025, at Elim Care Center, at the age of 101.

She was preceded in death by her beloved husband, Frederick; her parents, Charles and Mary Jahnke; and her sisters and their spouses: Charlotte (Egil) Hovey, Margaret (Guy) Straley, Ila (Harvey) Coon, and Norine (Lowell) Lussenden.

She is survived by her stepsons Frederick (Jeanne) Walsh of St. Paul, MN, and David Walsh of Daytona Beach Shores, FL; five step-grandchildren and 11 step-great-grandchildren; a dear step-daughter-in-law, Terri Walsh; 9 nieces and nephews; 12 great-nieces and nephews; and 21 great-great-nieces and nephews.

In lieu of flowers, memorials are preferred to the Pioneer House or to the Historical and Cultural Society of Clay County (Hjemkomst Center).

FUNERAL SERVICE: 10:00 AM Saturday, October 18, 2025, at the Boulger Funeral Home and Celebration of Life Center in Fargo with a visitation starting at 9:00 AM.

BURIAL: Riverside Cemetery in Fargo

Arrangements have been entrusted to the care of Boulger Funeral Home and Celebration of Life Center in Fargo. To sign the online guest book, or to view a livestream of the funeral service, please visit our website at www.boulgerfuneralhome.com

Services

Visitation: Saturday, October 18, 2025 9:00 am - 10:00 am

Boulger Funeral Home and Celebration of Life Center
123 10th Street S.
Fargo, North Dakota 58103

701-237-6441
www.boulgerfuneralhome.com

Funeral Service : Saturday, October 18, 2025 10:00 am

Boulger Funeral Home and Celebration of Life Center
123 10th Street S.
Fargo, North Dakota 58103

701-237-6441
www.boulgerfuneralhome.com

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Guestbook

  1. We enjoyed having you as a member of our DAR Chapter. What a great life!
    Our sympathies to your family.

    Dacotah Chapter Daughters of the American Revolution

  2. I was lucky to be one of Mrs. Walsh’s students at Ben Franklin back in the 80s! She was indeed an impactful teacher. Her high expectations and passion for her subject and world drew us in making her lessons stick with us. Reading about her life beyond the classroom, how fortunate we were to have had her as our teacher.

  3. Thank you for being an amazing educator. Miss Jahnke was my 8th grade Social Studies teacher at Ben Franklin.

  4. Rick and Jenifer Straley says:

    Forever and always in our hearts. It was a beautiful ceremony. All our love.

  5. She was my all time favorite teacher in Fargo Public Schools. I wish I had known her when I was adult. What a fascinating role model!

  6. Ms Jahnke was a teacher who saw something in me when I was a 9th grader at Ben Franklin Jr High in Fargo, way back in about 1966. She was one of the first teachers to give me an opportunity to debate–I had to do research, think critically, make my case. To do this she pitted me against the smartest boy in the class. I can’t remember if I won the debate, but I do remember the question…Should Red China be admitted to the United Nations? It was the start of a life-long love of international affairs and politics. What a strong role model she was for a young woman who was struggling to find my place in the world. I was so fortunate to have had her for a teacher.


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