Laura Ingalls Wilder (1867-1957) - Find a Grave... (2024)

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Original Name
Laura Elizabeth Ingalls
Birth

Pepin, Pepin County, Wisconsin, USA

Death
10 Feb 1957 (aged 90)

Mansfield, Wright County, Missouri, USA

Burial

Mansfield Cemetery

Mansfield, Wright County, Missouri, USA Show Map GPS-Latitude: 37.1132842, Longitude: -92.5847644

Memorial ID
1625 · View Source

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Settler, Author.

Born Laura Elizabeth Ingalls in Pepin, Wisconsin, the second daughter of Charles and Caroline Quiner Ingalls. The Ingalls family traveled by covered wagon to short residences in Iowa, Minnesota, and Kansas, before settling in DeSmet, South Dakota, one of two families who founded the town. To help her sister, Mary , receive an education at the Iowa College for the Blind, in Vinton, Iowa, Laura obtained her teaching certificate at age 15.

In 1885, Laura married Almanzo James Wilder in DeSmet, and their daughter, Rose, was born the following year. In 1894, the young family relocated to Mansfield in the Missouri Ozark Mountains, where Laura and Almanzo built the prosperous Rocky Ridge Farm.

During World War I, Laura became a columnist for The Missouri Ruralist, with the popular and thoughtful weekly, "As A Farm Wife Thinks." In 1932, she began writing the Little House books, an 8-part series, hand-written over 11 years, and delightfully illustrated by Garth Williams, based on her pioneer childhood and youth.

In her books, Laura stressed the importance of family, faith, simple values, and self-sufficiency. The books have remained enduringly popular, continuing to be published and read worldwide today.

After 63 years of marriage, Almanzo died in 1949. Laura continued to live at Rocky Ridge Farm until her passing in 1957, at the age of 90.

In 1954, Garth Williams designed the bronze Laura Ingalls Wilder Medal for presentation to Laura as the first recipient. The medal, administered by the Association for Library Service to Children, is an annual award presented to "an author or illustrator whose books, written in the United States, have made, over the years, a substantial and lasting contribution to literature for children."

There are museums across the United States at the sites where the Ingalls and Wilder families lived, including the Laura Ingalls Wilder Home and Museum at Rocky Ridge Farm. The home that Laura and Almanzo built by hand has been preserved just as it was when the Wilders' were in residence. Laura and Almanzo's daughter, Rose Wilder Lane, became a noted novelist and political writer.

Settler, Author.

Born Laura Elizabeth Ingalls in Pepin, Wisconsin, the second daughter of Charles and Caroline Quiner Ingalls. The Ingalls family traveled by covered wagon to short residences in Iowa, Minnesota, and Kansas, before settling in DeSmet, South Dakota, one of two families who founded the town. To help her sister, Mary , receive an education at the Iowa College for the Blind, in Vinton, Iowa, Laura obtained her teaching certificate at age 15.

In 1885, Laura married Almanzo James Wilder in DeSmet, and their daughter, Rose, was born the following year. In 1894, the young family relocated to Mansfield in the Missouri Ozark Mountains, where Laura and Almanzo built the prosperous Rocky Ridge Farm.

During World War I, Laura became a columnist for The Missouri Ruralist, with the popular and thoughtful weekly, "As A Farm Wife Thinks." In 1932, she began writing the Little House books, an 8-part series, hand-written over 11 years, and delightfully illustrated by Garth Williams, based on her pioneer childhood and youth.

In her books, Laura stressed the importance of family, faith, simple values, and self-sufficiency. The books have remained enduringly popular, continuing to be published and read worldwide today.

After 63 years of marriage, Almanzo died in 1949. Laura continued to live at Rocky Ridge Farm until her passing in 1957, at the age of 90.

In 1954, Garth Williams designed the bronze Laura Ingalls Wilder Medal for presentation to Laura as the first recipient. The medal, administered by the Association for Library Service to Children, is an annual award presented to "an author or illustrator whose books, written in the United States, have made, over the years, a substantial and lasting contribution to literature for children."

There are museums across the United States at the sites where the Ingalls and Wilder families lived, including the Laura Ingalls Wilder Home and Museum at Rocky Ridge Farm. The home that Laura and Almanzo built by hand has been preserved just as it was when the Wilders' were in residence. Laura and Almanzo's daughter, Rose Wilder Lane, became a noted novelist and political writer.

Bio by: Rae

Family Members

Parents

  • Charles Phillip Ingalls 1836–1902
  • Caroline Lake Quiner Ingalls 1839–1924

Spouse

  • Almanzo James Wilder 1857–1949 (m. 1885)

Siblings

  • Mary Amelia Ingalls 1865–1928
  • Caroline Celestia "Carrie" Ingalls Swanzey 1870–1946
  • Charles Frederick "Freddie" Ingalls 1875–1876
  • Grace Pearl Ingalls Dow 1877–1941

Children

  • Rose Wilder Lane 1886–1968
  • Baby Son Wilder 1889–1889

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  • Mansfield Cemetery
  • Mansfield
  • Wright County
  • Missouri
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  • Maintained by: Find a Grave
  • Added:Apr 25, 1998
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/1625/laura-ingalls_wilder: accessed ), memorial page for Laura Ingalls Wilder (7 Feb 1867–10 Feb 1957), Find a Grave Memorial ID 1625, citing Mansfield Cemetery, Mansfield, Wright County, Missouri, USA; Maintained by Find a Grave.

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Laura Ingalls Wilder  (1867-1957) - Find a Grave... (2024)

FAQs

Where is the grave of Laura Ingalls Wilder? ›

She is buried next to Almanzo and Rose in Mansfield, Missouri. The Little House series is made up of eight books originally published between 1932 and 1943. The First Four Years (1971), published postumously, is considered a separate work.

How old was Laura Ingalls when she died? ›

However, her health declined after her release from the hospital, and she died at home in her sleep on February 10, 1957, at the age of 90.

Where is Rose Wilder Lane buried? ›

Lane died in her sleep at age 81 on October 30, 1968, just as she was about to depart on a three-year world tour. She was buried next to her parents at Mansfield Cemetery in Mansfield, Missouri.

Where was Mary Ingalls buried? ›

She then traveled to Keystone, South Dakota to live with her second youngest sister Carrie Ingalls Swanzey. There she suffered a stroke, and on October 20, 1928, she died of pneumonia at age 63. Her body was returned to De Smet, where she was buried in the Ingalls family plot next to her parents at De Smet Cemetery.

Where was the real Little House on the Prairie? ›

Independence, Kansas, is the location where the Ingalls family settled on the Osage Diminished Reserve from 1869 to 1870, and was at the center of the plot of the book, Little House on the Prairie. Within a year of settling, the government required the family to vacate, and they never returned.

Where is Laura Ingalls Wilder brother buried? ›

Unfortunately, he died on August 27, 1876, at the age of 9 months. In Wilder's “Pioneer Girl” manuscript she wrote, “But little brother got worse instead of better, and one awful day he straightened out his little body and was dead.” Baby Freddie is buried in an unmarked grave in South Troy, MN.

Did the Ingalls girls have diabetes? ›

Like Grace and Laura, Carrie suffered from diabetes. ... Diabetes ran in the Ingalls family and Grace and her sisters all succumbed to complications from the disease. Laura Ingalls Wilder was the longest-lived Ingalls daughter by far, outliving Mary by 29, Carrie by 11 and Grace by 16 years.

Who did Laura Ingalls Wilder marry? ›

After failing at farming in the Dakotas in the 1890s—drought, illness, and fire contributing—Laura moved with her husband, Almanzo, and young daughter, Rose, to the Ozarks in Missouri.

Where is Charles Ingalls buried? ›

A Freemason, Ingalls was given Masonic rites at his funeral. He is buried at De Smet Cemetery alongside his wife, Caroline, his daughters Mary, Carrie, and Grace, as well as his infant grandson who died at 3 weeks old, the child of daughter Laura and son-in-law Almanzo Wilder.

Did Rose Wilder have a baby? ›

In the summer of 1910, Rose gave birth to a baby boy, who died shortly afterward. After moving several times, Rose and Gillette returned to San Francisco where they began selling real estate. Her career flourished, but when World War I decreased land sales, Rose returned to writing.

Where is Almanzo buried? ›

Rocky Ridge Farm, Mansfield, Missouri Gravesite of Laura Ingalls Wilder and husband Almanzo Wilder at Mansfield Cemetery, Mansfield, Missouri. Buried next to them is daughter Rose Wilder Lane.

Are there any Ingalls descendants alive today? ›

Although Laura has no living direct descendants, thousands of Americans share an ancestor or two with the ultimate pioneer girl. Laura Ingalls Wilder was descended from some old New England families.

Why did Mary go blind? ›

“l*ttle Scarlet Fever on the Prairie”

In By the Shores of Silver Lake, Laura attributes Mary's blindness to scarlet fever: “Mary and Carrie and baby Grace and Ma had all had scarlet fever. Far worst of all, the fever had settled in Mary's eyes and Mary was blind.” (p 1).

Is the original Ingalls house still standing? ›

The Ingalls family's original "Little House in the Big Woods" has since been lost, but a replica of their log cabin stands just ouside Pepin, Wis. Laura Elizabeth Ingalls was born on Feb. 7, 1867, seven miles north of the village of Pepin.

Where is Laura Ingalls Wilder son buried? ›

The grave of the infant son is next to that of Laura's mother, Caroline Ingalls and is located in the De Smet Cemetery, De Smet, South Dakota.

Where is Laura Ingalls Wilder's son buried? ›

and Mrs. A. J. Wilder's little child died Wednesday evening.” Grace Ingalls wrote in her diary on August 27th that “Laura's little baby boy only a month old died a little while ago, he looked just like Manly.” The unnamed baby boy was buried in the De Smet Cemetery….

Where are Laura Ingalls Wilder's parents buried? ›

Highly recommend stopping by the cemetery on your visit to DeSmet. What a lovely final resting spot for Pa ,Ma Mary, Carrie and Grace and her husband Nathan. Laura and Almanzo's infant son is buried here too.

Where is Carrie Ingalls buried? ›

Carrie herself would continue to live in Keystone until her death in 1946. She is buried alongside her parents and sisters at their family plot in De Smet.

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