
Margaret Anne Erickson passed away peacefully on May 27, 2026, in Leonardtown, Maryland, surrounded by the love of her family and the memories of a life well lived. She was 86 years old.
Born on February 6, 1940, in Salt Lake City, Utah, to John D. and Margaret R. Foster Compton, Margaret spent her childhood in Williston, North Dakota, and Havre, Montana. It was in Havre that she met the love of her life, Frank O. Erickson.
Their story became family legend. Margaret was working as a waitress when Frank, a telephone line worker for Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph Company, began stopping by after long days working in the cold Montana weather. After only two weeks of courtship, they married on February 25, 1958, beginning a partnership built on love, commitment, and adventure.
Together they traveled throughout Montana and Colorado as Frank’s work took them from community to community. They spent summers in West Glacier and winters in East Glacier, lived in Butte, Helena, Missoula, Townsend, and even Alamosa, Colorado, before eventually returning to the Montana they both loved.
Margaret embraced every move and every challenge with grace and determination. She built a career that reflected her intelligence, professionalism, and ability to connect with people. In 1972, she began working for Petrolane in Townsend as office manager and bookkeeper. What started as a job became a second family and a source of lifelong friendships. Through company changes and acquisitions, she remained a trusted and valued employee, earning repeated recognition for her exceptional work and error-free accounting. She retired from AmeriGas in 2000 after 28 years of dedicated service.
While she was proud of her career, Margaret’s greatest pride was her family.
She and Frank welcomed three sons: Frank Jr. (“Chip”), Michael, and Christopher. Though she endured profound loss throughout her life, including the deaths of Christopher, Chip, her beloved granddaughter Darby Layne, her parents John and Margaret Compton, and eventually Frank after forty years of marriage, she met each hardship with quiet strength and unwavering faith.
In 2002, Margaret moved to Great Mills, Maryland, to be near her son Michael and his family. There she enjoyed watching her grandchildren and later her great-grandchildren grow. Nothing brought her more joy than hearing about their accomplishments, celebrating milestones, and sharing stories about family.
Margaret had a gift for making people feel welcome. She never met a stranger for long. Whether through her work, her church, her neighborhood, or her family, she formed friendships that endured for decades. She possessed a remarkable memory for people and their stories and genuinely cared about the lives of others.
She is survived by her son Michael and daughter-in-law Jackie; granddaughter Megan; grandson Dane; great-grandchildren Bradley, Oliver, and Beck; brothers John and Nila Compton and Fred and Jeannie Compton; and beloved nieces and nephews James, Marca, Jennifer, and Jason.
Those who knew Margaret will remember her warm smile, her steadfast loyalty to family and friends, her strong work ethic, and her resilience in the face of life’s challenges. They will remember her laughter, her stories, and the genuine kindness she showed to everyone she encountered.
Her life was measured not by the years she lived, but by the love she gave and the lives she touched. Her legacy lives on in her family, her friends, and the countless people who were fortunate enough to know her.
A viewing and Funeral Mass will be held on June 8, 2026, at the Holy Cross Catholic Church in Townsend, MT. Interment will follow at the Deep Creek Cemetery, where she will be laid to rest beside her beloved husband, Frank and her children Chip and Christopher.
“Well done, good and faithful servant.”
Matthew 25:23.
Condolences to the family may be left at www.brinsfieldsfuneral.com.
