Home » Did Mary Ingalls pass away?

Did Mary Ingalls pass away?

by Judith Ferrier

1928. Mary Ingalls dies of pneumonia on October 17 at the home of her sister Carrie. She is buried in the family plot near De Smet.

Did Laura Ingalls lose a son in real life?

Archived from the original on June 22, 2018. Retrieved February 4, 2013.

  • ^ « Laura.pdf » (PDF). Little House Wayside; Pepin, Wisconsin (visitpepincounty.com). Archived (PDF) from the original on September 29, 2017. Retrieved February 8, 2015.
  • ^ a b Gormley, Myra Vanderpool; Rhonda R. McClure. « A Genealogical Look at Laura Ingalls Wilder ». GenealogyMagazine.com. Archived from the original on October 25, 2014. Retrieved October 25, 2014.
  • ^ « Eunice Sleeman ». Edmund Rice (1638) Association (edmund-rice.org). 2002. Archived from the original on February 26, 2010. Retrieved April 20, 2010. Eunice Sleeman was the mother of Eunice Blood (1782–1862), the wife of Nathan Colby (born 1778), who were the parents of Laura Louise Colby Ingalls (1810–1883), Ingalls’ paternal grandmother
  • ^ Famous Kin: https://famouskin.com/famous-kin-chart.php?name=9317+richard+warren&kin=12145+laura+ingalls+wilder Archived February 23, 2022, at the Wayback Machine
  • ^ « Famous Descendants ». MayflowerHistory.com. Archived from the original on October 19, 2016. Retrieved December 28, 2018.
  • ^ Kaye, Frances W. (2000). « Little Squatter on the Osage Diminished Reserve: Reading Laura Ingalls Wilder’s Kansas Indians ». Great Plains Quarterly. 20 (2): 123–140. Archived from the original on March 6, 2013. Retrieved June 3, 2013.
  • ^ « Laura Ingalls Wilder Timeline ». Laura Ingalls Wilder. The Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum; National Archives and Records Administration (hoover.archives.gov). Archived from the original on October 25, 2014. Retrieved October 25, 2014.
  • ^ « Land Records: Ingalls Homestead File ». National Archives. August 15, 2016. Archived from the original on February 11, 2020. Retrieved June 13, 2019.
  • ^ « Laura Ingalls Wilder Timeline ». Herbert Hoover Presidential Library & Museum. Herbert Hoover Presidential Library & Museum. Archived from the original on August 14, 2003. Retrieved January 27, 2017.
  • ^ Anderson, William (1998). Laura’s Album. Harper Collins.
  • ^ « Laura Ingalls Wilder Historical Timeline ». December 28, 2018. Archived from the original on July 19, 2020. Retrieved June 20, 2020.
  • ^ a b Wilder, Laura Ingalls; Wilder, Almanzo (1974). West from Home: Letters of Laura Ingalls Wilder, San Francisco, 1915. HarperCollins. p. xvii.
  • ^ Ketcham, Sallie (2014). Laura Ingalls Wilder: American Writer on the Prairie. Routledge. ISBN 978-1136725739. Archived from the original on February 23, 2022. Retrieved October 26, 2020.
  • ^ a b Thurman, Judith. « Wilder Women ». The New Yorker. Archived from the original on August 2, 2019. Retrieved February 4, 2020.
  • ^ « Laura Ingalls Wilder Timeline ». hoover.archives.gov. West Branch, IA, US: The Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum. Archived from the original on May 25, 2016. Retrieved June 8, 2016.
  • ^ « De Smet Info ». ingallshomestead.com. Archived from the original on June 28, 2016. Retrieved June 8, 2016.
  • ^ « Christian Living: A Magazine for Home and Community ». Mennonite Publishing House. March 3, 1963. Archived from the original on February 23, 2022. Retrieved June 4, 2020 – via Google Books.
  • ^ Miller 1998, p. 80.
  • ^ Miller 1998, p. 84.
  • What happened to Carrie Ingalls in real life?

    She became a talented printer and journalist, skilled in all aspects of the trade, including melting lead into type, editing, writing, publishing, ad work, and binding.

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    Her talents eventually got her a job with E.L. Senn, owner of many newspapers in South Dakota, and this work offered her great journalistic and travel opportunities – a perk since Carrie enjoyed travel very much. In fact, before she took this position, she had traveled a great deal, briefly living in Colorado and Wyoming, between 1905-1907, in search of a climate that would give her reprieve from her sinus and respiratory problems.

    Carrie found her way back to South Dakota, feeling rested and healthier, where she won the right to take a homestead claim in Indian lands near the town of Topbar, South Dakota, and lived in a small tar-paper shanty. She lived on the homestead for the requisite six months each year, and with her family in De Smet the remainder of the year.

    Did Carrie Ingalls ever marry?

    The legal mining ads were more expensive than the five dollar notices required of homesteaders; the flat rate for mine notices in the Recorder was nine dollars. Miners were presumably wealthier than farmers. Carrie also worked for the Hill City Star.

    On August 1, 1912, Carrie married David N. Swanzey and retired from the newspaper business so she could raise her stepchildren, Mary (age 8) and Harold (age 6). Carrie spent the remainder of her life in Keystone until she passed away on June 12, 1946 at the age of 76. After Ma Ingalls passed away in 1924, Mary, the blind sister, came to Keystone to live with Carrie until she passed away in Carrie’s home on October 20, 1928.

    With a visit to the Keystone Historical Museum, you will learn more about the 35 years Carrie spent in Keystone and you may view the memorabilia of the Ingalls’ family. You will learn about Uncle Henry Quiner, his wife Aunt Polly (Ingalls) Quiner, and Carrie’s double-cousin, Ruby, when they lived and died in the Keystone area during the mid 1880s.

    The free museum in the old two-story Victorian schoolhouse in Keystone is open from 9:00 am to 3:00 pm, May through September. The museum is open seven days a week.

    Thanks to Julie Hedgepeth Williams of Samford University in Birmingham, Alabama who authored the booklet « Little Newspapers on the Prairie: The Frontier Press of Carrie Ingalls ». The booklet is available for purchase in the Keystone Museum and will soon be available online. For more information on purchasing the booklet, please contact us via email at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

    Did Melissa Sue Anderson and Melissa Gilbert get along?

    Melissa Gilbert And Melissa Sue Anderson Didn’t Get Along At All. Melissa Gilbert and Alison Arngrim were inseparable as co-stars, but Melissa Gilbert’s relationship with Melissa Sue Anderson was less amicable.

    Who did not get along on Little House on the Prairie?

    There was no chance of an actual romance between the two because Steve Tracy was gay. Real-Life Rivalries on “Little House on the Prairie”

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    While Melissa Gilbert and Alison Arngrim played rivals but were actually very close many actors had trouble with one “Little House on the Prairie” co-star. Melissa Gilbert and Melissa Sue Anderson didn’t get along at all. Anderson played Mary Ingalls, Gilbert’s on-screen big sister. They put their differences aside for the show and appeared to be loving siblings to audiences.

    In Gilbert’s book “Prairie Tale,” in which she looks back at her time on “Little House on the Prairie,” she described Anderson as cold and bratty. The dislike went both ways. While Anderson hasn’t talked about their feud, they still aren’t friends today. While the Ingalls sister’s off-screen dislike for one another was the strongest, Gilbert wasn’t the only one who felt that way about Anderson. Several cast members have said that she was cold to them.

    Behind-the-Scenes Siblings

    William Oleson was played by Jonathan Gilbert. He was Melissa Gilbert’s adopted brother. Not only did they star in “Little House on the Prairie,” together, but they were also very close. However, they became estranged later in life.

    The actors on “Little House on the Prairie” were able to put aside rivalries and friendships alike to bring great on-screen performances to life.

    Why was Melissa Gilbert hospitalized?

    Melissa Gilbert is opening up about how a bug bite left her hospitalized.

    On Friday, the former Little House on the Prairie star, 59, posted two photos on Instagram from her hospital visit, sending a message to her followers about staying on top of their health and not dismissing any seemingly harmless bug bites.

    “A Public Service Announcement: Well that was a fun night in the ER (she said with dripping sarcasm),” she began her caption. “Two days ago a flying insect (not bee or wasp) bit my arm. By last night my arm was incredibly swollen, red and hot.”

    “Called my dr @skincarelab he suggested we hightail it to the ER. I was gonna wait but @timbusfield said, ‘Absolutely not. We are going!’ After many tests I was diagnosed with an abscess and cellulitis.”

    An abscess is a “pocket of pus” that can occur “almost anywhere” in the body, according to the U.S. National Library of Medicine.

    Did Laura and Nellie get along in real life?

    What goes on behind the scenes of some of our most beloved television shows can often be as dramatic as what happens on the screen. But, often it’s not so dramatic. This was the case when it comes to the relationship between two actresses on “Little House on the Prairie.”

    The actresses in question are Melissa Gilbert and Alison Arngrim. Gilbert played Laura Ingalls – one of the daughters of Charles Ingalls, who was played by Michael Landon, on the show. Arngrim played a character most people saw as a pest. That character’s name was Nellie Olsen.

    At times, Gilbert’s Laura and Arngrim’s Nellie were at odds. This led some fans to assume that Gilbert and Arngrim were at odds in real life. However, according to Arngrim, the two actresses actually did get along in real life on the set of “Little House on the Prairie.”

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    Arngrim talked about this during an interview with FoxNews.com. And, she said that she and Gilbert became friends very quickly while they were working on “Little House on the Prairie.”

    “It’s funny, I think if you play enemies on set you end up becoming friends.

    What happened to Mary Ingalls in real life?

    After her father died in 1902, she and her mother rented out a room in their home for extra income. Following her mother’s death in April 1924, she lived for a time with her sister, Grace Ingalls Dow in Manchester, South Dakota.

    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.[6]

    Ingalls family plot, De Smet Cemetery, South Dakota Mary Ingalls’ headstone at De Smet Cemetery, South Dakota In popular culture[edit]

    Ingalls was portrayed in the television series Little House on the Prairie by actress Melissa Sue Anderson. The television version of Mary Ingalls became a teacher in a school for the blind and married a blind fellow teacher. The real Mary Ingalls never became a teacher nor married, but returned to De Smet to live with her parents after graduating from Vinton.

    Was Nellie Oleson a real person?

    Nellie wasn’t a real person! Instead, she was a composite character created from three girls Laura knew from childhood: Nellie Owens, Genevieve Masters, and Estella Gilbert. The Little House character of Nellie Oleson is one-dimensional: snobbish, selfish, and thoroughly unpleasant.

    Did Grace Ingalls ever marry?

    Grace was 24 and Nathan was 42.

    They made their home on the Dow farm, not far from Manchester, and never had any children. They rented their farm out and moved to Oregon, thinking the climate would improve Nate’s severe allergies and asthma. After Pa Ingalls passed away in 1902, they lived with Ma and Mary in De Smet. When Ma passed away in 1924, Grace and Nathan took care of Mary in her De Smet home until Mary moved to Keystone, South Dakota to live with Carrie.

    Grace remembered the Dakota wildflowers, and shared her memories with Laura in a correspondence between the two of them. Grace kept a diary as a young girl which mentions events that took place in the First Four Years. The diary has been published in The Story of the Ingalls by William Anderson.

    Grace was not only a housewife and school teacher, but a talented journalist, writing for a magazine and local newspapers. Grace and Carrie both contributed to the 50th anniversary edition of “The De Smet News”.

     

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