Last winter, my two youngest children, my recuperating mother, and
I embarked on an unforgettable journey.
Vacation timing and my mom’s temporary disability allowed for a
long road trip, one I knew might never happen again.
I’m one to seize the moment, so I packed my mom in the car along
with kiddies and provisions as we began a 7000 mile cross country road
trip in the middle of winter.
Sounds crazy? Maybe, but we have no regrets. The weather was unusually kind to us in all 38 states we visited in just over three weeks. With no real commitments and time on our hands, our only concrete plan was to visit Laura Ingalls Wilder historic spots of interest, and to visit relatives in New York, Florida, Texas, New Mexico, and Nevada. The Little House on the Prairie books captivated me as a child; I’d read all the books by Laura Elizabeth Ingalls Wilder and her daughter Rose Wilder Lane, several times over. Inspired by this American Frontier family’s legacy, I’d written two of my own full-length pioneer novels by age 10.
I wouldn’t say I was a “fanatic” because I’ve never really been
fanatical about anything but I’d have to say I was thoroughly awestruck
by the stories, often dressing up in authentic 1800’s long dresses and
bonnets with my friends in elementary school.
As an adult, I read and appreciated adult biographies and writings
done by numerous authors on the fascinating pioneer woman and
children’s author.
I even had my Little House on the Prairie books autographed by the
cast of the TV series at the cast reunion I attended in 1998.
So in late December we found ourselves retracing much of the
historic trail depicted in the most loved series of children’s books ever.
Our first taste of Laura’s life was taking the Laura Ingalls
Wilder Historic Highway into the town of De Smet, South Dakota. Little
House followers know De Smet as the Little Town on the Prairie where the
Ingalls family barely survived the Long Winter.
We explored the main street of town where “Pa” Ingalls had his
store. Amazingly, the Loftus Store across the street, still stands for
visitors to enjoy along with more than a dozen other sites mentioned in
the series.
We toured the original Surveyor’s House from the Long Winter and
the house that “Pa” built for “Ma,” filled with family heirlooms, along
with the courthouse where “Pa” made history as justice of the peace,
after putting De Smet on the maps and founding the church.
As the stories came alive, my mom and kids were every bit as
fascinated as I.
At sunset, we drove up to the cemetery that overlooks the charming
little town and the “Shores of Silver Lake.” There we visited the
Ingalls family graves where Pa, Ma, Mary, Carrie, Grace, and Laura’s infant
son lay. A few feet away we saw the Boast and Brown family plots along
with other characters we felt we knew from the books.
Our final morning there, I arose an hour before sunrise. It was
almost 15 degrees as I left my mom and kids in the motel to explore an
area outside of town where Laura and her husband Almanzo homesteaded. It
was there in a shanty near their small tree claim that Laura gave birth
to famous author-daughter Rose Wilder Lane.
Much tragedy struck in those first years of Laura and Almanzo’s
married life and it’s there where the events took place mentioned in
Laura’s book, The First Four Years.
I was told by folks in town that I should look for a marker 1.4
miles outside of De Smet and then try to find a small indentation in the
prairie where the Wilder shanty once stood.
At dawn I drove my car across fields of frozen melting snow on a
grassy slope of prairie, watching farmers in the distance feeding their
livestock. Finally as the light began to envelope the enormous prairie,
I sat out on foot looking for “the spot.” I wasn’t expecting to find
it, well-warned by the docents in town that few people had ever actually
found it.
As I was nearly ready to give up, I looked back at the tiny town
on the prairie far below me and imagined life for Laura Ingalls Wilder,
a young pioneer woman living on this gentle slope of prairie just a
buggy ride away from her family and the comforts of town. As I walked
towards my car, a slight depression in the earth illuminated by the early
morning rays, caught my eye.
As my teeth chattered, I made my way over to the spot where
history had happened. Not only was the indentation right there but two deep
holes, certainly where Laura’s pump and outhouse had once been more than
120 years ago. As the freezing unforgiving prairie began to glow with
the colors Laura described so eloquently, I had a deeper appreciation
for the lives and fortitude of pioneers.
Later that morning on our way out of the Little Town on the Prairie, we stopped at the Ingalls original homestead location to see the original Cottonwood trees that “Pa” planted from seedlings, one for each of his girls. Standing below the wintry trees near Lake Thompson and Lake Henry where Laura rode ponies in By the Shores of Silver Lake, more of the magic came alive.
Leaving town as we passed the lakes where Almanzo courted and
proposed to Laura, in These Happy Golden Years, we stopped to watch the
birds fly over the lakes just as Laura described in her books.
Our next Little House on the Prairie stop was in Walnut Creek,
Minnesota to see the dugout described in, On the Banks of Plum Creek. As I
stood in the dugout spot where “Ma” had kept house in the side of a
hill by the creek, I had more appreciation for the pioneer spirit. Plum
Creek looked just as Laura had described it when she had played there
with her sister and got caught under the bridge over the creek.
In town we visited the museum and gift store where photographs of
the TV cast visiting the dugout made me laugh as I recalled my own
humorous moments with them at the cast reunion.
Still passing through many of the small towns mentioned in the
books, we continued toward Pepin, Wisconsin where it all began in Little
House in the Big Woods. After visiting a re-creation of the cabin where Laura was born in 1867, we enjoyed Lake Pepin.
It was New Year’s Day and the lake was serenely frozen as we
stopped to pick up pebbles as Laura did a century and a half ago. A lone man
ice-skating on the lake with his dog at his side, offered to let me
skate across the lake. What a New Year’s gift. Not only did I visit
Laura’s lake but I got the once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to ice skate across
it with the fresh chilly air nipping at my nose. I know I’ll never
forget the treat.
We would have gone on to Mansfied, Missouri where Laura spent her
later life with Almanzo on Rocky Ridge Farm but that museum isn’t open
during wintertime so that would have to wait for another trip.
On our three-week adventure we also visited Mt. Rushmore where at
the base of the mountain in nearby Keystone, Laura and Mary both
visited their sister Carrie Ingalls Swanzey living there with her husband and
step-children. We visited the cemetery in Keystone in the Black Hills
below the magnificent sculpted mountain and got another taste of Ingalls
history.
We visited Niagra Falls, Buffalo, New York City, Valley Forge,
Cape Cod, Amish Country, Ground Zero, Washington DC, The Liberty Bell, Las
Vegas, New Orleans, the Virginias and Carolinas, the Coast of Florida,
and numerous other interesting places and states but most memorable of
all was watching the Little House on the Prairie memories come to life
across the nation.
I recommend making the Little House on the Prairie points of
interest part of your itinerary on any cross-country trip. The kids will
find it unforgettable and they’ll learn American history in the process.
I named my oldest daughter after Laura Elizabeth Ingalls Wilder
whose books have been translated in more than forty languages around the
world. Maybe one day my daughter Laura and I can take the trip to
Mansfield, Missouri to complete the Ingalls trail.
Okay, I admit maybe I am a fan after all!
Carmel L. Mooney is a mother of five, author, and radio talk show host.
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