1 00:00:01,166 --> 00:00:10,800 ♪♪♪ 2 00:00:10,833 --> 00:00:13,800 Laura Ingalls Wilder: Prairie to Page 3 00:00:13,833 --> 00:00:15,800 has been made possible in part by a major grant 4 00:00:15,833 --> 00:00:18,800 from the National Endowment for the Humanities, 5 00:00:18,833 --> 00:00:20,800 Bringing you the stories that define us. 6 00:00:20,833 --> 00:00:23,200 Support also provided by the following 7 00:00:28,200 --> 00:00:30,700 Young woman: "Once upon a time, 60 years ago, 8 00:00:30,733 --> 00:00:33,433 a little girl lived in the big woods of Wisconsin 9 00:00:33,466 --> 00:00:35,900 in a little gray house made of logs. 10 00:00:35,933 --> 00:00:39,666 The great dark trees of the big woods stood all around the house 11 00:00:39,700 --> 00:00:43,566 and beyond them were other trees and beyond them more trees. 12 00:00:43,600 --> 00:00:45,800 There were no people." 13 00:00:45,833 --> 00:00:47,100 Narrator: When Laura Ingalls Wilder 14 00:00:47,133 --> 00:00:49,266 told the stories of her childhood, 15 00:00:49,300 --> 00:00:53,000 millions of young readers were spellbound. 16 00:00:53,033 --> 00:00:56,100 For teachers, the "Little House" books were a perfect primer 17 00:00:56,133 --> 00:00:57,600 on the settling of America, 18 00:00:57,633 --> 00:01:00,900 written by someone who was there. 19 00:01:00,933 --> 00:01:05,200 Harper: "I realized that I had seen and lived it all... 20 00:01:05,233 --> 00:01:09,066 all the successive phases of the frontier... 21 00:01:09,100 --> 00:01:11,466 first the frontiersman, 22 00:01:11,500 --> 00:01:17,266 then the pioneer, then the farmers, and the towns. 23 00:01:17,300 --> 00:01:20,466 And then I understood that in my own life 24 00:01:20,500 --> 00:01:25,200 I represented a whole period of American history." 25 00:01:25,233 --> 00:01:26,700 Anderson: Laura Ingalls Wilder 26 00:01:26,733 --> 00:01:30,800 is the quintessential American pioneer. 27 00:01:30,833 --> 00:01:34,433 Thousands of people had very similar experiences 28 00:01:34,466 --> 00:01:36,366 as Wilder and her family. 29 00:01:36,400 --> 00:01:40,866 But her storytelling made that an adventure story. 30 00:01:40,900 --> 00:01:44,233 Young woman: "Pa and Ma were still and silent on the wagon seat, 31 00:01:44,266 --> 00:01:46,733 and Mary and Laura were quiet, too. 32 00:01:46,766 --> 00:01:49,333 But Laura felt all excited inside. 33 00:01:49,366 --> 00:01:51,400 You never know what will happen next, 34 00:01:51,433 --> 00:01:53,033 nor where you'll be tomorrow, 35 00:01:53,066 --> 00:01:55,800 when you are traveling in a covered wagon." 36 00:01:55,833 --> 00:01:58,266 Fraser: She's almost like a folk artist. 37 00:01:58,300 --> 00:02:03,200 The novels as she left them are almost works of folk art 38 00:02:03,233 --> 00:02:08,133 that capture the attitudes of the time. 39 00:02:08,166 --> 00:02:11,300 Narrator: After more than 30 million copies sold, 40 00:02:11,333 --> 00:02:13,466 and a long-running TV show... 41 00:02:13,500 --> 00:02:16,100 Laura: Home is the nicest word there is. 42 00:02:16,133 --> 00:02:17,766 Pa: One of the nicest, that's for sure. 43 00:02:17,800 --> 00:02:19,133 Narrator: ...the "Little House" books 44 00:02:19,166 --> 00:02:22,800 are a part of the American fabric, and so is the woman 45 00:02:22,833 --> 00:02:25,833 who based them on her extraordinary childhood. 46 00:02:25,866 --> 00:02:27,033 Anderson: We have the image 47 00:02:27,066 --> 00:02:29,633 of this wonderful, white-haired, pretty lady 48 00:02:29,666 --> 00:02:33,200 telling America's kids all these great stories. 49 00:02:33,233 --> 00:02:38,200 That became an urban legend. 50 00:02:38,233 --> 00:02:40,066 Narrator: To her readers, Wilder's novels 51 00:02:40,100 --> 00:02:43,200 were a wondrous achievement from a humble farm woman 52 00:02:43,233 --> 00:02:47,200 who seemed to have perfected her craft all on her own. 53 00:02:47,233 --> 00:02:49,200 They had no idea the books emerged 54 00:02:49,233 --> 00:02:53,633 from a hidden collaboration with her daughter, Rose. 55 00:02:53,666 --> 00:02:57,066 Fraser: Rose's role in this is not to be dismissed. 56 00:02:57,100 --> 00:02:59,166 Anderson: Friends of hers ask her, 57 00:02:59,200 --> 00:03:01,366 "What did you have to do with your mother's books?" 58 00:03:01,400 --> 00:03:03,633 And she cut them off very sharply. 59 00:03:03,666 --> 00:03:06,633 It was a deep, dark secret. 60 00:03:06,666 --> 00:03:11,100 Hill: I think all good writers are mysterious in some way. 61 00:03:11,133 --> 00:03:14,500 What was real and what was not real in their lives? 62 00:03:14,533 --> 00:03:19,166 Fraser: They're wonderful family stories. 63 00:03:19,200 --> 00:03:24,233 They show us who we want to think we are. 64 00:03:24,266 --> 00:03:30,800 We want to think that we're self-reliant pioneers. 65 00:03:30,833 --> 00:03:34,566 We want to think that that's the truth about ourselves. 66 00:03:34,600 --> 00:03:39,300 But when you examine that fantasy, you realize 67 00:03:39,333 --> 00:03:45,433 that the reality was much, much, much more complicated. 68 00:03:45,466 --> 00:03:47,066 Sarah: There are two Lauras. 69 00:03:47,100 --> 00:03:48,833 There's Laura of the book, 70 00:03:48,866 --> 00:03:50,633 and there's Mrs. Wilder, 71 00:03:50,666 --> 00:03:52,633 who used to be Laura. 72 00:03:52,666 --> 00:03:56,733 Harper: "All I have told is the truth 73 00:03:56,766 --> 00:03:58,600 but not the whole truth." 74 00:03:58,633 --> 00:04:04,600 ♪♪♪ 75 00:04:04,633 --> 00:04:10,500 ♪♪♪ 76 00:04:10,533 --> 00:04:12,166 Fiery: "Mrs. Laura I. Wilder, 77 00:04:12,200 --> 00:04:14,733 Rocky Ridge, Mansfield, Missouri. 78 00:04:14,766 --> 00:04:16,833 Dear Mrs. Wilder, 79 00:04:16,866 --> 00:04:18,866 I like the material you have used. 80 00:04:18,900 --> 00:04:20,966 It covers a period in American history 81 00:04:21,000 --> 00:04:23,200 about which very little has been written, 82 00:04:23,233 --> 00:04:26,700 and almost nothing for boys and girls." 83 00:04:26,733 --> 00:04:29,366 Narrator: The news from a New York editor was unexpected. 84 00:04:29,400 --> 00:04:32,300 And at 64, Laura Ingalls Wilder 85 00:04:32,333 --> 00:04:36,233 was on her way to becoming a children's author. 86 00:04:36,266 --> 00:04:38,933 The manuscript, "When Grandma Was a Little Girl," 87 00:04:38,966 --> 00:04:41,433 was spun out of a memoir Wilder had written 88 00:04:41,466 --> 00:04:43,700 called "Pioneer Girl." 89 00:04:43,733 --> 00:04:47,500 It showed promise, but it needed more work. 90 00:04:47,533 --> 00:04:49,566 Fiery: "Would you be willing to make some editorial changes 91 00:04:49,600 --> 00:04:50,833 on your manuscript? 92 00:04:50,866 --> 00:04:52,266 The more details you can include 93 00:04:52,300 --> 00:04:54,633 about the everyday life of the pioneers, 94 00:04:54,666 --> 00:04:56,100 such as the making of the bullets, 95 00:04:56,133 --> 00:04:58,133 what they eat and wear, et cetera, 96 00:04:58,166 --> 00:04:59,366 the more vivid an appeal 97 00:04:59,400 --> 00:05:02,433 it will make to children's imaginations." 98 00:05:02,466 --> 00:05:04,400 Narrator: "When Grandma Was a Little Girl" 99 00:05:04,433 --> 00:05:07,266 turned into "Little House in the Big Woods," 100 00:05:07,300 --> 00:05:10,466 and that turned into something else entirely. 101 00:05:10,500 --> 00:05:14,366 Harper: "When to my surprise the book made such a success 102 00:05:14,400 --> 00:05:17,066 and children all over the U.S. 103 00:05:17,100 --> 00:05:20,366 wrote to me begging for more stories, 104 00:05:20,400 --> 00:05:24,766 I began to think what a wonderful childhood I had had." 105 00:05:24,800 --> 00:05:29,633 ♪♪♪ 106 00:05:29,666 --> 00:05:31,900 Narrator: So began the "Little House" series... 107 00:05:31,933 --> 00:05:36,366 Wilder's eight books about growing up and moving West. 108 00:05:36,400 --> 00:05:38,366 Running through them all, she later said, 109 00:05:38,400 --> 00:05:40,366 were her parents' values. 110 00:05:40,400 --> 00:05:43,366 "When possible, they turned the bad into good. 111 00:05:43,400 --> 00:05:46,200 When not possible, they endured." 112 00:05:46,233 --> 00:05:49,100 Harper: "Sister Mary and I loved Pa's stories best. 113 00:05:49,133 --> 00:05:52,966 We never forgot them, and I have always thought 114 00:05:53,000 --> 00:05:57,366 that they were just too good to be altogether lost." 115 00:05:57,400 --> 00:05:59,900 Narrator: And when Wilder preserved her father's stories, 116 00:05:59,933 --> 00:06:03,733 she made him a mythic figure... always looking West. 117 00:06:03,766 --> 00:06:06,833 Her readers would come to know Charles Ingalls as Pa, 118 00:06:06,866 --> 00:06:09,166 just as she did. 119 00:06:09,200 --> 00:06:13,200 Charles Ingalls was born in Western New York in 1836, 120 00:06:13,233 --> 00:06:15,533 one of nine children. 121 00:06:15,566 --> 00:06:18,533 Fraser: Charles Ingalls came from a family 122 00:06:18,566 --> 00:06:22,466 of not great means and some insecurity himself. 123 00:06:22,500 --> 00:06:24,766 He was born in Cuba, New York. 124 00:06:24,800 --> 00:06:27,700 His father didn't have his own land, 125 00:06:27,733 --> 00:06:30,800 is working as some kind of laborer. 126 00:06:30,833 --> 00:06:32,500 Narrator: Mottos and slogans of the day 127 00:06:32,533 --> 00:06:36,233 said, "Go West, young man, and grow up with the country," 128 00:06:36,266 --> 00:06:41,166 and the Ingalls family did just that, heading out to Illinois. 129 00:06:41,200 --> 00:06:44,866 Fraser: This is for sure Charles Ingalls' first exposure 130 00:06:44,900 --> 00:06:47,233 to the prairies. 131 00:06:47,266 --> 00:06:50,733 This may be the time in his life 132 00:06:50,766 --> 00:06:53,066 when he is exposed to music. 133 00:06:53,100 --> 00:06:58,766 Maybe gets his fiddle in this town or crossroads in Illinois. 134 00:06:58,800 --> 00:07:03,966 ♪♪♪ 135 00:07:04,000 --> 00:07:09,133 ♪♪♪ 136 00:07:09,166 --> 00:07:11,033 Narrator: But for all the opportunity advertised, 137 00:07:11,066 --> 00:07:12,900 the family never found it. 138 00:07:12,933 --> 00:07:15,733 They eventually moved on to Wisconsin. 139 00:07:15,766 --> 00:07:18,866 Fraser: There's not a lot of stability in... in this family. 140 00:07:18,900 --> 00:07:22,933 They're working. They're trying to make a living. 141 00:07:22,966 --> 00:07:26,200 They're not really succeeding for any length of time. 142 00:07:26,233 --> 00:07:30,366 They can't really put together enough of a stake to last, 143 00:07:30,400 --> 00:07:33,933 and so that's Charles' youth. 144 00:07:33,966 --> 00:07:37,866 And he will basically hew to that pattern 145 00:07:37,900 --> 00:07:41,766 for most of the rest of his life. 146 00:07:41,800 --> 00:07:43,766 Narrator: In Wisconsin, Charles Ingalls' family 147 00:07:43,800 --> 00:07:47,700 befriends the Quiners who live across the Oconomowoc River. 148 00:07:47,733 --> 00:07:53,166 Charles courts Caroline Quiner, and they marry in 1860. 149 00:07:53,200 --> 00:07:56,666 Harper: "Mother was descended from an old Scotch family 150 00:07:56,700 --> 00:07:59,800 and inherited the Scotch thriftiness 151 00:07:59,833 --> 00:08:03,066 which helped with the livelihood. 152 00:08:03,100 --> 00:08:05,700 Although born and raised on the frontier, 153 00:08:05,733 --> 00:08:10,500 she was an educated and cultured woman. 154 00:08:10,533 --> 00:08:15,833 She was very quiet and gentle, but proud and particular 155 00:08:15,866 --> 00:08:18,733 in all manners of good breeding." 156 00:08:18,766 --> 00:08:22,366 Hill: Their personalities were very, very different. 157 00:08:22,400 --> 00:08:25,266 Caroline was more quiet and reserved. 158 00:08:25,300 --> 00:08:27,666 Charles Ingalls was more outgoing, 159 00:08:27,700 --> 00:08:30,966 a poet, a hunter, a musician. 160 00:08:31,000 --> 00:08:35,566 That's how Laura Ingalls Wilder came to think of her father. 161 00:08:35,600 --> 00:08:36,966 Wilder: Pa holds his fiddle, 162 00:08:37,000 --> 00:08:41,066 and he nearly always sat in his chair when he played 163 00:08:41,100 --> 00:08:45,400 and kept time to the music by patting his foot on the floor. 164 00:08:45,433 --> 00:08:47,466 ♪♪♪ 165 00:08:47,500 --> 00:08:51,133 Hill: He was the more romantic of the two, I think. 166 00:08:51,166 --> 00:08:55,333 But they had a very solid, very happy marriage. 167 00:08:55,366 --> 00:08:57,133 Harper: "The spirit of the frontier 168 00:08:57,166 --> 00:09:00,266 was one of humor and cheerfulness 169 00:09:00,300 --> 00:09:02,400 no matter what happened, 170 00:09:02,433 --> 00:09:06,933 whether the joke was on oneself or on the other fellow. 171 00:09:06,966 --> 00:09:12,000 Strangers coming West possessed or acquired that spirit 172 00:09:12,033 --> 00:09:15,100 if they survived as Westerners. 173 00:09:15,133 --> 00:09:17,766 My parents possessed this frontier spirit 174 00:09:17,800 --> 00:09:19,866 to a marked degree." 175 00:09:19,900 --> 00:09:22,600 ♪♪♪ 176 00:09:22,633 --> 00:09:24,800 Narrator: Charles and Caroline's early years together 177 00:09:24,833 --> 00:09:27,000 were marked by the Civil War. 178 00:09:27,033 --> 00:09:30,866 But another war hit closer to their Wisconsin home. 179 00:09:30,900 --> 00:09:33,100 Fraser: The incident that is mentioned 180 00:09:33,133 --> 00:09:34,766 in "Little House on the Prairie," 181 00:09:34,800 --> 00:09:38,400 the U.S. Dakota war of 1862, 182 00:09:38,433 --> 00:09:42,133 happened five years before Laura was born. 183 00:09:42,166 --> 00:09:44,633 Beane: The Dakota War took place 184 00:09:44,666 --> 00:09:47,366 because of a number of broken treaties, 185 00:09:47,400 --> 00:09:53,666 broken promises between this government and Dakota people. 186 00:09:53,700 --> 00:09:55,433 The people who did fight in the war 187 00:09:55,466 --> 00:09:59,966 were fighting to protect the rights of our families 188 00:10:00,000 --> 00:10:05,166 to remain in our homeland and to remain Dakota. 189 00:10:05,200 --> 00:10:09,866 And they were very, very violent battles that took place. 190 00:10:09,900 --> 00:10:12,233 And the media coverage that happened during that era 191 00:10:12,266 --> 00:10:16,866 was media coverage that was trying to incite fear in people. 192 00:10:16,900 --> 00:10:20,800 Fraser: The Ingalls would've known all about that because 193 00:10:20,833 --> 00:10:25,333 they were living just across the Mississippi in Wisconsin. 194 00:10:25,366 --> 00:10:28,366 [ Chuckling ] Wisconsin as a state was... 195 00:10:28,400 --> 00:10:31,066 was scared spitless, 196 00:10:31,100 --> 00:10:34,266 because the refugees came flooding back 197 00:10:34,300 --> 00:10:36,566 across the river into Wisconsin. 198 00:10:36,600 --> 00:10:40,333 So all the Wisconsinites thought that they were next, 199 00:10:40,366 --> 00:10:43,233 you know, that they were going to be attacked. 200 00:10:43,266 --> 00:10:48,500 White women at that time did feel great fear 201 00:10:48,533 --> 00:10:50,066 of Indians. 202 00:10:50,100 --> 00:10:53,066 And, you know, Wilder, years later, 203 00:10:53,100 --> 00:10:55,500 I think she was rem... remembering the fear 204 00:10:55,533 --> 00:10:57,866 that her mother must have expressed 205 00:10:57,900 --> 00:11:03,033 and the racism that her mother clearly felt. 206 00:11:03,066 --> 00:11:06,566 Narrator: 1862 also brought the Homestead Act. 207 00:11:06,600 --> 00:11:10,033 In exchange for a small filing fee, men and women, 208 00:11:10,066 --> 00:11:11,733 freed slaves and immigrants, 209 00:11:11,766 --> 00:11:16,333 were given the chance to own and farm 160-acre plots. 210 00:11:16,366 --> 00:11:19,766 American Indians continue to be forced off tribal lands 211 00:11:19,800 --> 00:11:22,666 in the rush to settle the Great Plains. 212 00:11:22,700 --> 00:11:24,933 McDowell: That was really the push of the day. 213 00:11:24,966 --> 00:11:29,933 It was push out, you know, Westward expansion. 214 00:11:29,966 --> 00:11:32,966 Let's get the churches built and the schools built 215 00:11:33,000 --> 00:11:34,900 and the railroad built 216 00:11:34,933 --> 00:11:39,300 and connect the whole country from coast to coast. 217 00:11:39,333 --> 00:11:41,900 Narrator: Charles and Caroline settle into a log cabin 218 00:11:41,933 --> 00:11:43,900 near Pepin, Wisconsin, 219 00:11:43,933 --> 00:11:47,000 where they are surrounded by family and neighbors. 220 00:11:47,033 --> 00:11:48,900 Their first daughter, Mary, is born 221 00:11:48,933 --> 00:11:51,900 just as the Civil war is coming to an end. 222 00:11:51,933 --> 00:11:56,366 Laura arrives two years later, in 1867. 223 00:11:56,400 --> 00:11:58,966 Young woman: "Once upon a time, 60 years ago, 224 00:11:59,000 --> 00:12:01,900 a little girl lived in the big woods of Wisconsin 225 00:12:01,933 --> 00:12:04,400 in a little gray house made of logs. 226 00:12:04,433 --> 00:12:08,366 The great dark trees of the big woods stood all around the house 227 00:12:08,400 --> 00:12:12,400 and beyond them were other trees and beyond them more trees. 228 00:12:12,433 --> 00:12:15,000 There were no people. There were only trees 229 00:12:15,033 --> 00:12:18,366 and the wild animals who had their homes among them." 230 00:12:18,400 --> 00:12:22,433 McDowell: When I compare Laura Ingalls Wilder's writing, 231 00:12:22,466 --> 00:12:26,966 I think of Thoreau talking about Walden Pond. 232 00:12:27,000 --> 00:12:29,566 It's that same sort of connection 233 00:12:29,600 --> 00:12:36,100 to "how I built my cabin, how I lived, and what I saw." 234 00:12:36,133 --> 00:12:37,533 Narrator: When Laura is 2, 235 00:12:37,566 --> 00:12:41,500 the Ingalls leave the log cabin bound for Kansas. 236 00:12:41,533 --> 00:12:43,633 Harper: "Pa stopped the horses and the wagon 237 00:12:43,666 --> 00:12:47,866 they were hauling away out on the prairie in Indian territory. 238 00:12:47,900 --> 00:12:50,333 'Well, Caroline, ' he said, 239 00:12:50,366 --> 00:12:53,300 'Here's the place I've been looking for.'" 240 00:12:53,333 --> 00:12:55,033 Narrator: Charles and his family 241 00:12:55,066 --> 00:12:56,800 settle near Independence, Kansas, 242 00:12:56,833 --> 00:12:59,033 where their third daughter, Carrie, is born. 243 00:12:59,066 --> 00:13:04,100 Fraser: They settle on land that it's pretty clear he knew 244 00:13:04,133 --> 00:13:06,233 was not available 245 00:13:06,266 --> 00:13:08,600 for white settlement at that time. 246 00:13:08,633 --> 00:13:11,133 It belonged to the Osage Indians. 247 00:13:11,166 --> 00:13:13,866 The logs that Charles Ingalls used 248 00:13:13,900 --> 00:13:16,566 to build the little house on the prairie 249 00:13:16,600 --> 00:13:17,933 did not belong to him. 250 00:13:17,966 --> 00:13:20,300 They belonged to the Osage. 251 00:13:20,333 --> 00:13:22,500 It was an act of theft. 252 00:13:22,533 --> 00:13:26,366 Certainly wasn't seen so at the time 253 00:13:26,400 --> 00:13:28,333 by people like Charles Ingalls. 254 00:13:28,366 --> 00:13:30,733 But now it's quite clear that it was. 255 00:13:30,766 --> 00:13:34,100 ♪♪♪ 256 00:13:34,133 --> 00:13:37,566 Erdrich: The idea that this was empty space... 257 00:13:37,600 --> 00:13:40,933 It was shocking to me that I hadn't noticed that, 258 00:13:40,966 --> 00:13:43,033 but I was a child. So this is how children read it. 259 00:13:43,066 --> 00:13:46,066 They read these books 260 00:13:46,100 --> 00:13:49,800 with a complete sense of storytelling 261 00:13:49,833 --> 00:13:53,900 and faith in these books. 262 00:13:53,933 --> 00:13:57,033 Narrator: "Little House on the Prairie," Wilder's third novel, 263 00:13:57,066 --> 00:13:58,733 would describe her family's time 264 00:13:58,766 --> 00:14:01,666 in what she called "Indian country." 265 00:14:01,700 --> 00:14:05,066 Fraser: She also portrays the child, Laura, 266 00:14:05,100 --> 00:14:07,566 as having a fear 267 00:14:07,600 --> 00:14:11,166 but also a deep fascination with 268 00:14:11,200 --> 00:14:13,566 what she describes as these, you know, 269 00:14:13,600 --> 00:14:18,166 wild people who were completely different. 270 00:14:18,200 --> 00:14:21,133 That kind of encapsulates 271 00:14:21,166 --> 00:14:25,700 the very strange attitude that whites had at that time 272 00:14:25,733 --> 00:14:28,300 towards these people as if they were, 273 00:14:28,333 --> 00:14:30,033 first of all, not people, 274 00:14:30,066 --> 00:14:32,833 that they were something that could be 275 00:14:32,866 --> 00:14:34,966 had for the taking. 276 00:14:35,000 --> 00:14:37,966 That is one of the things that makes that novel, 277 00:14:38,000 --> 00:14:41,666 I think, one of the most important documents 278 00:14:41,700 --> 00:14:43,833 about the history of that time. 279 00:14:43,866 --> 00:14:52,533 ♪♪♪ 280 00:14:52,566 --> 00:14:56,066 Narrator: Laura is barely 4 when the Ingalls leave Kansas. 281 00:14:56,100 --> 00:14:58,600 The family returns to Wisconsin, 282 00:14:58,633 --> 00:15:00,733 and the next three years of Laura's life 283 00:15:00,766 --> 00:15:03,333 are spent in the cabin near Pepin. 284 00:15:03,366 --> 00:15:05,100 Harper: "When the work was done, 285 00:15:05,133 --> 00:15:07,566 Ma would cut out paper dolls for us 286 00:15:07,600 --> 00:15:11,500 and let us cook on the stove for our play house dinners. 287 00:15:11,533 --> 00:15:13,833 She taught Mary how to knit. 288 00:15:13,866 --> 00:15:16,033 She said I was too little, 289 00:15:16,066 --> 00:15:19,333 but sitting by and watching, 290 00:15:19,366 --> 00:15:23,033 I caught the trick first." 291 00:15:23,066 --> 00:15:26,466 Fraser: Wisconsin seems to have been 292 00:15:26,500 --> 00:15:29,533 probably the most stability 293 00:15:29,566 --> 00:15:31,500 that they might have ever experienced 294 00:15:31,533 --> 00:15:33,166 if they had just stayed. 295 00:15:33,200 --> 00:15:34,833 They seemed to have been able 296 00:15:34,866 --> 00:15:38,400 to kind of eke out an existence there. 297 00:15:38,433 --> 00:15:40,466 So they might have saved themselves 298 00:15:40,500 --> 00:15:44,500 quite a lot of toil and trouble if they had stayed. 299 00:15:44,533 --> 00:15:48,533 But they didn't. [ Laughs ] 300 00:15:48,566 --> 00:15:50,466 Narrator: The Ingalls' second stay in Pepin 301 00:15:50,500 --> 00:15:53,800 became the basis for "Little House in the Big Woods." 302 00:15:53,833 --> 00:15:56,966 The time frame was shifted a bit for the novel. 303 00:15:57,000 --> 00:15:58,833 When she wrote for children, 304 00:15:58,866 --> 00:16:01,366 Wilder eliminated and embellished, 305 00:16:01,400 --> 00:16:04,733 shaping and stretching her own history. 306 00:16:04,766 --> 00:16:05,966 Fraser: And I think, ultimately, 307 00:16:06,000 --> 00:16:08,100 writing the "Little House" books 308 00:16:08,133 --> 00:16:10,900 was her was her way of trying to process 309 00:16:10,933 --> 00:16:13,000 all that had happened to her 310 00:16:13,033 --> 00:16:14,966 both in positive and negative ways. 311 00:16:15,000 --> 00:16:18,266 She was both revisiting the closeness 312 00:16:18,300 --> 00:16:20,633 and the love she had for her family. 313 00:16:20,666 --> 00:16:23,833 But she was also reliving the terror 314 00:16:23,866 --> 00:16:27,666 of their experience, because on many occasions, 315 00:16:27,700 --> 00:16:31,066 they did face ruin or starvation 316 00:16:31,100 --> 00:16:35,766 or disaster. 317 00:16:35,800 --> 00:16:37,566 Narrator: Disaster was looming when the Ingalls 318 00:16:37,600 --> 00:16:42,366 moved West to Minnesota to start a new life in a dugout. 319 00:16:42,400 --> 00:16:44,866 Fraser: The Ingalls family comes to 320 00:16:44,900 --> 00:16:50,233 this area near Walnut Grove in 1874. 321 00:16:50,266 --> 00:16:52,933 And they settle in this place called Plum Creek 322 00:16:52,966 --> 00:16:55,166 which is a beautiful spot. 323 00:16:55,200 --> 00:16:59,733 And they begin all over again. He builds a house. 324 00:16:59,766 --> 00:17:01,666 She calls it the beautiful house. 325 00:17:01,700 --> 00:17:04,033 I think it was one of the nicest places 326 00:17:04,066 --> 00:17:05,733 that they'd ever lived. [ Chuckles ] 327 00:17:05,766 --> 00:17:08,466 And then, of course, he plants this beautiful crop. 328 00:17:08,500 --> 00:17:11,600 And it's growing very nicely. 329 00:17:11,633 --> 00:17:13,166 Harper: "The weather was just right, 330 00:17:13,200 --> 00:17:16,266 and the crops grew and grew. 331 00:17:16,300 --> 00:17:19,133 He said the grain was all soft and milky yet, 332 00:17:19,166 --> 00:17:22,133 but it was so well grown, 333 00:17:22,166 --> 00:17:26,100 he felt sure we would have a wonderful crop." 334 00:17:26,133 --> 00:17:27,666 Fraser: The wheat is coming up. 335 00:17:27,700 --> 00:17:30,033 And it's gonna pay all their debts. 336 00:17:30,066 --> 00:17:31,400 [ Laughing ] And, you know, they... 337 00:17:31,433 --> 00:17:35,666 they've built castles in the sky on this crop. 338 00:17:35,700 --> 00:17:40,033 And then they hear their neighbor screaming. 339 00:17:40,066 --> 00:17:41,500 Harper: "'The grasshoppers are coming! 340 00:17:41,533 --> 00:17:44,200 The grasshoppers are coming!' she shrieked. 341 00:17:44,233 --> 00:17:45,466 'Come and look!' 342 00:17:45,500 --> 00:17:49,300 And then we saw that the cloud was grasshoppers, 343 00:17:49,333 --> 00:17:51,233 their wings a shiny white 344 00:17:51,266 --> 00:17:55,900 making a screen between us and the sun." 345 00:17:55,933 --> 00:17:58,233 Narrator: It's 1875, 346 00:17:58,266 --> 00:18:00,166 and the Ingalls have just experienced 347 00:18:00,200 --> 00:18:03,033 the Rocky Mountain Locust Invasion... 348 00:18:03,066 --> 00:18:04,466 trillions of grasshoppers 349 00:18:04,500 --> 00:18:08,666 in a cloud that covered nearly 200,000 square miles. 350 00:18:08,700 --> 00:18:12,300 Grasshoppers would again ruin a second Ingalls' harvest 351 00:18:12,333 --> 00:18:13,933 the following season. 352 00:18:13,966 --> 00:18:16,000 Fraser: The grasshoppers eat everything. 353 00:18:16,033 --> 00:18:20,133 And how, you know, heartbreaking that must have been 354 00:18:20,166 --> 00:18:24,366 because it just destroyed all of their hopes 355 00:18:24,400 --> 00:18:26,333 in a matter of hours. 356 00:18:26,366 --> 00:18:28,566 Narrator: The locust plague appears true-to-life 357 00:18:28,600 --> 00:18:32,633 in Wilder's fourth novel, "On the Banks of Plum Creek." 358 00:18:32,666 --> 00:18:34,233 Hill: What I think is really striking 359 00:18:34,266 --> 00:18:36,633 is that her account in "Pioneer Girl," 360 00:18:36,666 --> 00:18:39,700 which is essentially nonfiction, 361 00:18:39,733 --> 00:18:42,600 traces fairly closely to what she did 362 00:18:42,633 --> 00:18:46,033 in the fictional version in "On the Banks of Plum Creek." 363 00:18:46,066 --> 00:18:48,800 It's... It's relatively close. 364 00:18:48,833 --> 00:18:51,033 Young woman: "It was a cloud of something like snowflakes, 365 00:18:51,066 --> 00:18:52,633 but they were larger than snowflakes, 366 00:18:52,666 --> 00:18:54,366 and thin and glittering. 367 00:18:54,400 --> 00:18:57,166 Light shone through each flickering particle. 368 00:18:57,200 --> 00:19:00,800 Plunk! Something hit Laura's head and fell to the ground. 369 00:19:00,833 --> 00:19:02,166 She looked down and saw 370 00:19:02,200 --> 00:19:04,900 the largest grasshopper she had ever seen. 371 00:19:04,933 --> 00:19:07,700 Then huge brown grasshoppers were hitting the ground 372 00:19:07,733 --> 00:19:11,566 all around her, hitting her head and her face and her arms. 373 00:19:11,600 --> 00:19:13,766 They came thudding down like hail. 374 00:19:13,800 --> 00:19:16,033 The cloud was hailing grasshoppers. 375 00:19:16,066 --> 00:19:19,000 The cloud was grasshoppers." 376 00:19:19,033 --> 00:19:23,200 Anderson: The devastating grasshopper plagues 377 00:19:23,233 --> 00:19:26,366 ruined their chances of successful farming. 378 00:19:26,400 --> 00:19:29,800 ♪♪♪ 379 00:19:29,833 --> 00:19:33,300 Narrator: In Walnut Grove, Caroline gives birth again. 380 00:19:33,333 --> 00:19:36,333 This time, it's a boy they call Freddy. 381 00:19:36,366 --> 00:19:40,433 Charles, now deeply in debt, signs a pauper's oath... 382 00:19:40,466 --> 00:19:43,766 a public acknowledgment that he is destitute. 383 00:19:43,800 --> 00:19:46,200 It allows him to receive food for his family... 384 00:19:46,233 --> 00:19:50,100 in this case, 2 1/2 barrels of flour. 385 00:19:50,133 --> 00:19:53,766 Sarah: It is not well-known that he signed a pauper's oath 386 00:19:53,800 --> 00:19:57,066 during the grasshopper plague, and that was... 387 00:19:57,100 --> 00:19:58,766 I mean, that would've been a huge blow. 388 00:19:58,800 --> 00:20:04,100 To swear anything, to swear any kind of oath was... 389 00:20:04,133 --> 00:20:07,033 We don't appreciate what that means today. 390 00:20:07,066 --> 00:20:09,733 He was writing down on paper, "I am a pauper. 391 00:20:09,766 --> 00:20:11,333 I cannot support my family. 392 00:20:11,366 --> 00:20:13,533 I need help." 393 00:20:13,566 --> 00:20:17,900 And that's so counter to the Pa that we're familiar with. 394 00:20:17,933 --> 00:20:22,300 Anderson: And they were essentially so in need of funds 395 00:20:22,333 --> 00:20:25,266 that Charles Ingalls concocted a scheme 396 00:20:25,300 --> 00:20:29,100 that they would move to Burr Oak, Iowa. 397 00:20:29,133 --> 00:20:31,800 Narrator: And the downward spiral continues. 398 00:20:31,833 --> 00:20:35,000 Caroline is sick, and there are more doctor's bills. 399 00:20:35,033 --> 00:20:39,600 On the way to Burr Oak, baby Freddy dies. 400 00:20:39,633 --> 00:20:43,500 Harper: "Little brother was not well, and the Dr. came. 401 00:20:43,533 --> 00:20:46,266 I thought that would cure him as it had Ma 402 00:20:46,300 --> 00:20:50,233 when the Dr. came to see her. 403 00:20:50,266 --> 00:20:53,200 But little brother got worse instead of better, 404 00:20:53,233 --> 00:20:57,033 and one awful day, he straightened out his little body 405 00:20:57,066 --> 00:20:59,133 and was dead." 406 00:20:59,166 --> 00:21:01,600 Hill: Probably the biggest omission 407 00:21:01,633 --> 00:21:04,366 that Wilder made in the "Little House" books, 408 00:21:04,400 --> 00:21:07,266 the biggest deviation from her real life, 409 00:21:07,300 --> 00:21:10,000 was the family's experiences in Iowa 410 00:21:10,033 --> 00:21:14,600 and the loss of baby brother Freddy. 411 00:21:14,633 --> 00:21:16,866 Freddy died very suddenly. 412 00:21:16,900 --> 00:21:18,866 He was only 9 months old. 413 00:21:18,900 --> 00:21:22,200 And Laura Ingalls Wilder chose not to write about him 414 00:21:22,233 --> 00:21:24,733 or the family's experiences in Iowa. 415 00:21:24,766 --> 00:21:26,833 ♪♪♪ 416 00:21:26,866 --> 00:21:28,300 Fraser: Charles Ingalls, 417 00:21:28,333 --> 00:21:33,166 he's again heavily in debt to doctors. 418 00:21:33,200 --> 00:21:37,066 In fact, at one point, you know, the doctor's wife in Burr Oak 419 00:21:37,100 --> 00:21:42,433 approaches Caroline Ingalls about possibly adopting Laura 420 00:21:42,466 --> 00:21:49,033 as a kind of surrogate daughter/household worker. 421 00:21:49,066 --> 00:21:52,033 Narrator: After the birth of the last Ingalls daughter, Grace, 422 00:21:52,066 --> 00:21:56,066 the doctor's bills and debt become insurmountable. 423 00:21:56,100 --> 00:21:58,400 Fraser: If you got in debt to somebody, 424 00:21:58,433 --> 00:22:01,833 there were legal ramifications for that. 425 00:22:01,866 --> 00:22:04,266 And so they end up leaving Burr Oak 426 00:22:04,300 --> 00:22:05,633 in the middle of the night. 427 00:22:05,666 --> 00:22:08,033 Charles Ingalls loads the whole family 428 00:22:08,066 --> 00:22:10,400 and all their belongings in the wagon. 429 00:22:10,433 --> 00:22:14,100 And they just flee the town, flee their debts. 430 00:22:14,133 --> 00:22:16,500 I mean, she just would not have dreamed 431 00:22:16,533 --> 00:22:20,300 of saying that, I think, in a book for children. 432 00:22:20,333 --> 00:22:22,500 Harper: "Sometime in the night, we children were waked 433 00:22:22,533 --> 00:22:26,133 to find the wagon with a cover on standing by the door 434 00:22:26,166 --> 00:22:31,100 and everything but our bed and the stove loaded in. 435 00:22:31,133 --> 00:22:35,100 Then we climbed in and drove away in the darkness." 436 00:22:35,133 --> 00:22:37,433 Fraser: You see her again and again trying to grapple 437 00:22:37,466 --> 00:22:41,333 with her... her father's failures as a provider. 438 00:22:41,366 --> 00:22:44,633 [ Chuckling ] You know, and there's this sort of tragic 439 00:22:44,666 --> 00:22:47,400 sentence in one of her manuscripts 440 00:22:47,433 --> 00:22:50,266 where she writes, "Pa was a good farmer. 441 00:22:50,300 --> 00:22:52,900 He always paid his debts"... 442 00:22:52,933 --> 00:22:55,400 you know, complete fantasy. 443 00:22:55,433 --> 00:22:56,633 Narrator: In her fiction, 444 00:22:56,666 --> 00:22:59,500 Pa moved the family West in a straight line. 445 00:22:59,533 --> 00:23:01,833 The truth was a different story. 446 00:23:01,866 --> 00:23:04,100 It was a meandering journey. 447 00:23:04,133 --> 00:23:05,933 By time she was 14, 448 00:23:05,966 --> 00:23:09,600 Laura lived in at least 15 different homes. 449 00:23:09,633 --> 00:23:12,100 Sarah: The trajectory in real life is very zig-zaggy. 450 00:23:12,133 --> 00:23:14,566 In the books the... the movement is attributed 451 00:23:14,600 --> 00:23:15,900 to Pa's wandering foot 452 00:23:15,933 --> 00:23:20,766 and to this Westward pull that he experiences. 453 00:23:20,800 --> 00:23:25,500 But the reality looks more like 454 00:23:25,533 --> 00:23:28,566 he's just... he's bouncing a bit. 455 00:23:28,600 --> 00:23:30,666 He tries something, and it doesn't work, 456 00:23:30,700 --> 00:23:33,166 so he has to go backwards and try something new, 457 00:23:33,200 --> 00:23:35,300 and that works for a bit. 458 00:23:35,333 --> 00:23:37,700 And then he gets a better idea, or it doesn't work. 459 00:23:37,733 --> 00:23:40,766 It's a lot of trial and error. 460 00:23:40,800 --> 00:23:43,466 Narrator: By the late summer of 1877, 461 00:23:43,500 --> 00:23:46,766 the Ingalls family is zig-zagging once again, 462 00:23:46,800 --> 00:23:49,466 back to Walnut Grove. 463 00:23:49,500 --> 00:23:52,433 Fraser: Laura begins working in a hotel 464 00:23:52,466 --> 00:23:55,066 for a family called the Masters family. 465 00:23:55,100 --> 00:23:59,333 She's exposed to all kinds of shenanigans in that hotel. 466 00:23:59,366 --> 00:24:02,766 It's sort of a, you know, slightly squalid, 467 00:24:02,800 --> 00:24:06,466 dangerous atmosphere for a kid. 468 00:24:06,500 --> 00:24:11,000 In fact, one of the Masters' wastrel sons 469 00:24:11,033 --> 00:24:14,066 almost seems to have tried to abuse her or attack her 470 00:24:14,100 --> 00:24:15,666 in the middle of the night one night. 471 00:24:15,700 --> 00:24:17,133 And she fights him off 472 00:24:17,166 --> 00:24:18,733 by telling him that she'll scream 473 00:24:18,766 --> 00:24:21,200 if he does anything to her. 474 00:24:21,233 --> 00:24:23,533 Harper: "One night, I waked from a sound sleep 475 00:24:23,566 --> 00:24:26,733 to find Will leaning over me. 476 00:24:26,766 --> 00:24:29,100 I could smell the whiskey on his breath. 477 00:24:29,133 --> 00:24:30,733 I sat up quickly. 478 00:24:30,766 --> 00:24:32,633 'Is Nannie sick?' I asked. 479 00:24:32,666 --> 00:24:36,100 'No, ' he answered, 'Lie down and be still!' 480 00:24:36,133 --> 00:24:39,700 'Go away quick, ' I said, 'or I will scream for Nannie.' 481 00:24:39,733 --> 00:24:44,966 He went, and the next day, Ma said I could come home." 482 00:24:45,000 --> 00:24:49,100 Fraser: It shows you just how kind of out of control 483 00:24:49,133 --> 00:24:52,766 the whole situation had become. 484 00:24:52,800 --> 00:24:55,533 Narrator: Then Mary, who had been sick for several months, 485 00:24:55,566 --> 00:24:57,700 became gravely ill. 486 00:24:57,733 --> 00:25:00,600 Harper: "She was delirious with an awful fever, 487 00:25:00,633 --> 00:25:02,800 and one morning when I looked at her, 488 00:25:02,833 --> 00:25:06,300 I saw one side of her face drawn out of shape. 489 00:25:06,333 --> 00:25:08,700 Ma said Mary had had a stroke. 490 00:25:08,733 --> 00:25:10,766 After the stroke, Mary began to get better, 491 00:25:10,800 --> 00:25:12,866 but she could not see well. 492 00:25:12,900 --> 00:25:15,400 As Mary grew stronger, her eyes grew weaker 493 00:25:15,433 --> 00:25:19,533 until when she could sit up in the big chair among the pillows, 494 00:25:19,566 --> 00:25:21,366 she could hardly see at all." 495 00:25:23,333 --> 00:25:26,900 Narrator: Mary likely had viral meningoencephalitis, 496 00:25:26,933 --> 00:25:29,733 and her blindness deeply affected Laura. 497 00:25:29,766 --> 00:25:32,266 Hill: When Mary went blind, 498 00:25:32,300 --> 00:25:36,066 Pa charged Laura with being Mary's eyes. 499 00:25:36,100 --> 00:25:40,100 And that role of describing the world, 500 00:25:40,133 --> 00:25:43,400 describing what was happening in the outside world 501 00:25:43,433 --> 00:25:45,400 for her sister 502 00:25:45,433 --> 00:25:50,200 made Laura more aware of the outside world, 503 00:25:50,233 --> 00:25:54,600 more aware of the importance of vocabulary and description. 504 00:25:54,633 --> 00:25:57,000 And I believe it went on to make Laura 505 00:25:57,033 --> 00:26:01,500 the writer that she actually became later on. 506 00:26:01,533 --> 00:26:04,166 Narrator: Mary's blindness is attributed to scarlet fever 507 00:26:04,200 --> 00:26:07,100 in the novel "By the Shores of Silver Lake," 508 00:26:07,133 --> 00:26:08,366 which follows the family 509 00:26:08,400 --> 00:26:11,766 to what would become De Smet, South Dakota. 510 00:26:11,800 --> 00:26:14,066 Charles Ingalls has a job as a bookkeeper 511 00:26:14,100 --> 00:26:16,600 with the Chicago and Northwestern Railway. 512 00:26:16,633 --> 00:26:19,033 He takes full advantage of the Homestead Act 513 00:26:19,066 --> 00:26:20,533 and files a claim. 514 00:26:20,566 --> 00:26:25,600 McDowell: So, imagine De Smet when the Ingalls first arrived. 515 00:26:25,633 --> 00:26:27,666 We start to lay out a town. 516 00:26:27,700 --> 00:26:31,366 So we go from the railroad, and we start to lay out roads. 517 00:26:31,400 --> 00:26:32,866 They're coming on straight lines. 518 00:26:32,900 --> 00:26:34,166 And from those roads, 519 00:26:34,200 --> 00:26:37,900 we have all of these sections being laid out. 520 00:26:37,933 --> 00:26:40,833 We divide them up, and we have schools. 521 00:26:40,866 --> 00:26:44,000 And we have claim shanties being built. 522 00:26:44,033 --> 00:26:47,800 And we have churches being built. 523 00:26:47,833 --> 00:26:50,900 And we have grocery stores coming. 524 00:26:50,933 --> 00:26:55,200 And Charles Ingalls is building some of those buildings, 525 00:26:55,233 --> 00:26:59,633 so it starts to become a town. 526 00:26:59,666 --> 00:27:02,700 Narrator: And Charles is one of its founding residents. 527 00:27:02,733 --> 00:27:05,066 Hill: He was on the school board. 528 00:27:05,100 --> 00:27:06,766 He was a city leader. 529 00:27:06,800 --> 00:27:10,200 He was a prominent citizen of De Smet 530 00:27:10,233 --> 00:27:12,766 when they finally settled down. 531 00:27:12,800 --> 00:27:17,100 So, he had this kind of romantic life, 532 00:27:17,133 --> 00:27:19,700 but he was also very civic-minded. 533 00:27:19,733 --> 00:27:22,900 ♪♪♪ 534 00:27:22,933 --> 00:27:25,433 Narrator: De Smet is where Charles and Caroline Ingalls 535 00:27:25,466 --> 00:27:27,533 stay for the rest of their lives, 536 00:27:27,566 --> 00:27:28,800 and it is the setting 537 00:27:28,833 --> 00:27:31,733 for the remainder of the "Little House" books. 538 00:27:31,766 --> 00:27:34,433 Anderson: I think the book that gives us 539 00:27:34,466 --> 00:27:37,900 the clearest picture of hardship is "The Long Winter," 540 00:27:37,933 --> 00:27:43,433 when they suffered from near malnutrition and were cold 541 00:27:43,466 --> 00:27:46,633 and without supplies and truly isolated 542 00:27:46,666 --> 00:27:49,966 in the community of De Smet, South Dakota. 543 00:27:50,000 --> 00:27:53,366 That's a survival story. 544 00:27:53,400 --> 00:27:56,400 Fraser: The actual event, you know, which was really known 545 00:27:56,433 --> 00:27:59,800 as the hard winter was even more horrific 546 00:27:59,833 --> 00:28:04,666 for the family than she let on in the novel. 547 00:28:04,700 --> 00:28:11,100 They were trapped in this very small house with no insulation 548 00:28:11,133 --> 00:28:12,766 with another family, 549 00:28:12,800 --> 00:28:17,966 George Masters and his wife and their baby. 550 00:28:18,000 --> 00:28:20,033 Sarah: During the Long Winter, there was another couple. 551 00:28:20,066 --> 00:28:22,933 A married couple and their infant son 552 00:28:22,966 --> 00:28:26,366 were with them in the house in town for the entire winter. 553 00:28:26,400 --> 00:28:29,500 They were boarders, and they just seem 554 00:28:29,533 --> 00:28:31,300 to have taken the perspective that, 555 00:28:31,333 --> 00:28:35,033 "We're not part of this family, so we're just going to sit." 556 00:28:35,066 --> 00:28:36,400 They didn't contribute. 557 00:28:36,433 --> 00:28:38,766 Fraser: They did nothing to really help. 558 00:28:38,800 --> 00:28:42,566 And she hated them for the rest of her life. 559 00:28:42,600 --> 00:28:46,600 [ Laughs ] And... And the way she dealt with that in the novel 560 00:28:46,633 --> 00:28:49,333 was to leave them out entirely. 561 00:28:49,366 --> 00:28:52,666 Sarah: She refused to touch that in "The Long Winter." 562 00:28:52,700 --> 00:28:56,100 She wanted that family to be a complete unit, 563 00:28:56,133 --> 00:28:59,633 everybody pitching in equally to see them through. 564 00:28:59,666 --> 00:29:02,300 And she said it would... It would ruin the picture 565 00:29:02,333 --> 00:29:03,700 that she was trying to make 566 00:29:03,733 --> 00:29:08,866 if she let the Masters family intrude on that. 567 00:29:08,900 --> 00:29:11,800 Harper: "Storms followed storms so quickly 568 00:29:11,833 --> 00:29:14,833 that the railroad track could not be kept open. 569 00:29:14,866 --> 00:29:17,266 The company kept men shoveling snow 570 00:29:17,300 --> 00:29:19,566 and snow plows working all they could, 571 00:29:19,600 --> 00:29:22,200 but the snow plows stuck in the snow 572 00:29:22,233 --> 00:29:23,400 and the snow blew back 573 00:29:23,433 --> 00:29:26,766 faster than the men could shovel it out." 574 00:29:26,800 --> 00:29:29,500 Narrator: At the end of January, there was too much snow 575 00:29:29,533 --> 00:29:34,133 for trains to get through, and food and supplies ran low. 576 00:29:34,166 --> 00:29:37,333 The people of De Smet began to starve. 577 00:29:37,366 --> 00:29:39,900 Fraser: Eventually, they got to the point 578 00:29:39,933 --> 00:29:41,366 where it was clear 579 00:29:41,400 --> 00:29:46,133 that somebody was gonna have to try to go out 580 00:29:46,166 --> 00:29:50,633 during one of these windows of opportunity between storms 581 00:29:50,666 --> 00:29:55,066 to try to find a farmer who had seed wheat. 582 00:29:55,100 --> 00:29:59,000 Narrator: Enter Almanzo Wilder, a homesteader in his 20s, 583 00:29:59,033 --> 00:30:02,466 who volunteered for what seemed like a suicide mission. 584 00:30:02,500 --> 00:30:04,866 Hill: Laura Ingalls Wilder sets up the scene 585 00:30:04,900 --> 00:30:07,066 in "The Long Winter." 586 00:30:07,100 --> 00:30:09,700 We have a great deal of suspense as readers 587 00:30:09,733 --> 00:30:13,100 as to whether Almanzo and Cap Garland 588 00:30:13,133 --> 00:30:15,500 are gonna find that settler, 589 00:30:15,533 --> 00:30:19,400 and if so, can they persuade him to sell the seed wheat. 590 00:30:19,433 --> 00:30:21,133 Ultimately, they do. 591 00:30:21,166 --> 00:30:23,566 And then on the drive back, 592 00:30:23,600 --> 00:30:26,366 there's another blizzard on the horizon. 593 00:30:26,400 --> 00:30:29,900 And Cap and Almanzo make it back into town 594 00:30:29,933 --> 00:30:32,533 just in the nick of time. 595 00:30:32,566 --> 00:30:37,500 It's a really suspenseful, dramatic, kind of scary scene. 596 00:30:37,533 --> 00:30:40,400 This was something that they actually did in real life, 597 00:30:40,433 --> 00:30:42,533 and they saved the town. 598 00:30:42,566 --> 00:30:46,066 ♪♪♪ 599 00:30:46,100 --> 00:30:48,333 Young woman: "And the fear and the suffering of the long winter 600 00:30:48,366 --> 00:30:52,066 seemed to rise like a dark cloud and float away on the music. 601 00:30:52,100 --> 00:30:53,466 Spring had come. 602 00:30:53,500 --> 00:30:56,500 The sun was shining warm, the winds were soft, 603 00:30:56,533 --> 00:30:59,733 and the green grass growing." 604 00:30:59,766 --> 00:31:02,566 Narrator: By the next November, Mary has gone off to Iowa 605 00:31:02,600 --> 00:31:05,433 to attend a college for the blind. 606 00:31:05,466 --> 00:31:08,933 Wilder: Mary graduated from the Iowa College for the Blind 607 00:31:08,966 --> 00:31:10,833 at Vinton, Iowa. 608 00:31:10,866 --> 00:31:15,000 After graduating, she lived at home with Pa and Ma. 609 00:31:15,033 --> 00:31:18,366 She was always busy helping Ma with the housework 610 00:31:18,400 --> 00:31:20,433 and with her books and music. 611 00:31:20,466 --> 00:31:22,733 She never regained her sight. 612 00:31:22,766 --> 00:31:26,100 ♪♪♪ 613 00:31:26,133 --> 00:31:28,566 Narrator: Laura takes her first teaching position at a school 614 00:31:28,600 --> 00:31:31,066 about 8 miles south of De Smet. 615 00:31:31,100 --> 00:31:33,366 She is 16. And around this time, 616 00:31:33,400 --> 00:31:35,800 Almanzo Wilder begins to drive her 617 00:31:35,833 --> 00:31:38,866 to and from De Smet every weekend. 618 00:31:38,900 --> 00:31:42,733 Skurnick: What I remember most about the romance 619 00:31:42,766 --> 00:31:47,166 is that even when it's not clear that they're dating 620 00:31:47,200 --> 00:31:49,033 but that Manzo still shows up 621 00:31:49,066 --> 00:31:51,666 and takes her home every weekend... 622 00:31:51,700 --> 00:31:53,100 She has not asked. 623 00:31:53,133 --> 00:31:55,500 He has not even said he's going to do it. 624 00:31:55,533 --> 00:31:58,300 He just understands, and he does it, 625 00:31:58,333 --> 00:32:03,000 and he commits and shows his commitment that way. 626 00:32:03,033 --> 00:32:05,266 You know, he's not... not even doing it so he can see her. 627 00:32:05,300 --> 00:32:08,066 He's doing it so she can see her family. 628 00:32:08,100 --> 00:32:10,900 That is the part of their courtship 629 00:32:10,933 --> 00:32:14,733 that made me understand actual courtship. 630 00:32:14,766 --> 00:32:17,233 ♪♪♪ 631 00:32:17,266 --> 00:32:19,533 Narrator: The courtship continues when Laura returns 632 00:32:19,566 --> 00:32:22,133 to De Smet and to being a student. 633 00:32:22,166 --> 00:32:23,866 During that year, she writes an essay 634 00:32:23,900 --> 00:32:25,666 which reads, in part... 635 00:32:25,700 --> 00:32:27,966 Young woman: "Without an ambition to excel others 636 00:32:28,000 --> 00:32:29,800 and to surpass one's self, 637 00:32:29,833 --> 00:32:31,733 there would be no superior merit. 638 00:32:31,766 --> 00:32:35,933 To win anything, we must have the ambition to do so." 639 00:32:35,966 --> 00:32:39,633 Hill: There's that remarkable scene with Mr. Owen 640 00:32:39,666 --> 00:32:41,766 which occurs in both "Pioneer Girl" 641 00:32:41,800 --> 00:32:45,200 and later in the "Little House" books themselves, 642 00:32:45,233 --> 00:32:48,966 where Mr. Owen compliments the young Laura 643 00:32:49,000 --> 00:32:53,433 on her first exposition, her first writing assignment. 644 00:32:53,466 --> 00:32:55,200 Young woman: "He looked at her sharply and said, 645 00:32:55,233 --> 00:32:57,233 'You have written compositions before?' 646 00:32:57,266 --> 00:32:58,700 'No, sir, ' Laura said. 647 00:32:58,733 --> 00:33:00,266 'This is my first.' 648 00:33:00,300 --> 00:33:02,200 'Well, you should write more of them. 649 00:33:02,233 --> 00:33:03,366 I would not have believed 650 00:33:03,400 --> 00:33:06,533 that anyone could do so well the first time.'" 651 00:33:06,566 --> 00:33:08,200 Hill: What I think is remarkable about that 652 00:33:08,233 --> 00:33:10,533 is not only that Laura Ingalls Wilder wrote 653 00:33:10,566 --> 00:33:12,166 about the scene both in "Pioneer Girl" 654 00:33:12,200 --> 00:33:13,833 and later in the "Little House" books, 655 00:33:13,866 --> 00:33:17,233 but that she kept the original writing assignment 656 00:33:17,266 --> 00:33:19,900 from Mr. Owen for all of those years. 657 00:33:19,933 --> 00:33:22,333 She still has that, and she has... 658 00:33:22,366 --> 00:33:25,600 And she kept all of her scraps of poetry. 659 00:33:25,633 --> 00:33:28,366 For me, that indicates that Laura Ingalls Wilder 660 00:33:28,400 --> 00:33:33,200 probably had the ambition to write very early on. 661 00:33:33,233 --> 00:33:34,533 Narrator: Laura's school days end 662 00:33:34,566 --> 00:33:36,400 when she takes another teaching job, 663 00:33:36,433 --> 00:33:40,033 this one closer to home and to Almanzo. 664 00:33:40,066 --> 00:33:43,433 By now, they have affectionate names for one another... 665 00:33:43,466 --> 00:33:46,400 Manly and Bessie. 666 00:33:46,433 --> 00:33:49,900 Harper: "'I was wondering if you wanted an engagement ring, ' 667 00:33:49,933 --> 00:33:51,166 he answered. 668 00:33:51,200 --> 00:33:53,266 And I gave a startled gasp. 669 00:33:53,300 --> 00:33:57,766 'That would depend, ' I said, 'on who offered it to me.' 670 00:33:57,800 --> 00:34:00,900 'Would you take it from me?' he asked, 671 00:34:00,933 --> 00:34:03,433 and I said 'Yes!' 672 00:34:03,466 --> 00:34:07,366 Then he kissed me good night, 673 00:34:07,400 --> 00:34:10,033 and I went into the house, 674 00:34:10,066 --> 00:34:14,033 not quite sure if I was engaged to Manly 675 00:34:14,066 --> 00:34:17,766 or to the starlight and the prairie." 676 00:34:17,800 --> 00:34:20,533 Narrator: Laura refused to say the word "obey" 677 00:34:20,566 --> 00:34:22,233 in the wedding vows. 678 00:34:22,266 --> 00:34:26,166 It would set the tone for their lifelong partnership. 679 00:34:26,200 --> 00:34:28,266 Young woman: "She summoned all her courage and said, 680 00:34:28,300 --> 00:34:31,133 'Almanzo, I must ask you something. 681 00:34:31,166 --> 00:34:33,400 Do you want me to promise to obey you?' 682 00:34:33,433 --> 00:34:35,700 Soberly he answered, 'Of course not. 683 00:34:35,733 --> 00:34:37,666 I know it is in the wedding ceremony, 684 00:34:37,700 --> 00:34:40,500 but it is only something that women say. 685 00:34:40,533 --> 00:34:41,833 I never knew one that did it, 686 00:34:41,866 --> 00:34:45,033 nor any decent man that wanted her to.' 687 00:34:45,066 --> 00:34:48,366 'Well, I am not going to say I will obey you, ' said Laura. 688 00:34:48,400 --> 00:34:50,833 'I cannot make a promise that I will not keep, 689 00:34:50,866 --> 00:34:53,600 and, Almanzo, even if I tried, I do not think 690 00:34:53,633 --> 00:34:57,966 I could obey anybody against my better judgment.' 691 00:34:58,000 --> 00:35:01,033 'I'd never expect you to, ' he told her." 692 00:35:01,066 --> 00:35:03,933 Sarah: She had the... the... the presence of mind, 693 00:35:03,966 --> 00:35:08,000 the c... the confidence to say to her future husband, 694 00:35:08,033 --> 00:35:10,166 "I can't promise this." 695 00:35:10,200 --> 00:35:11,700 Speaks to her strength of character. 696 00:35:11,733 --> 00:35:14,133 It speaks to her knowledge of herself. 697 00:35:14,166 --> 00:35:17,500 She knows that she can't do that. 698 00:35:17,533 --> 00:35:21,200 And she feels comfortable enough with him 699 00:35:21,233 --> 00:35:23,333 to... to put that forward. 700 00:35:23,366 --> 00:35:28,233 And that he accepts it says a good deal about him, as well. 701 00:35:28,266 --> 00:35:31,033 Anderson: Almanzo was perfectly competent 702 00:35:31,066 --> 00:35:33,600 and a strong, hard worker. 703 00:35:33,633 --> 00:35:37,033 But he was willing to defer to his wife. 704 00:35:37,066 --> 00:35:42,633 And they had a unique partnership in their marriage 705 00:35:42,666 --> 00:35:47,833 before most marriages were organized in that fashion. 706 00:35:47,866 --> 00:35:51,800 Before Almanzo made any purchases or changes 707 00:35:51,833 --> 00:35:55,600 on the farm, they consulted together. 708 00:35:55,633 --> 00:35:59,500 And if he would do something rash without asking her, 709 00:35:59,533 --> 00:36:02,866 she made it known that she really didn't care for that. 710 00:36:02,900 --> 00:36:06,866 Narrator: They are married in August 1885. 711 00:36:06,900 --> 00:36:09,733 Hill: Laura Ingalls Wilder's first four years of marriage 712 00:36:09,766 --> 00:36:13,933 with Almanzo were extraordinarily difficult, 713 00:36:13,966 --> 00:36:16,700 one financial disaster after another. 714 00:36:16,733 --> 00:36:20,200 Their barn burned down. Their house burned down. 715 00:36:20,233 --> 00:36:22,266 ♪♪♪ 716 00:36:22,300 --> 00:36:25,466 They lost an infant son. 717 00:36:25,500 --> 00:36:28,033 Almanzo suffered a stroke, 718 00:36:28,066 --> 00:36:33,000 and it left him crippled for the rest of his life. 719 00:36:33,033 --> 00:36:35,833 Narrator: Laura would later relive that terrible time 720 00:36:35,866 --> 00:36:37,700 in "The First Four Years," 721 00:36:37,733 --> 00:36:40,600 a novel she drafted but never published. 722 00:36:40,633 --> 00:36:45,433 Hill: Very few young couples, I think, could have faced 723 00:36:45,466 --> 00:36:49,266 as many crises in the first four years of marriage 724 00:36:49,300 --> 00:36:51,000 as those two did. 725 00:36:51,033 --> 00:36:53,500 The one bright spot in those first four years 726 00:36:53,533 --> 00:36:56,466 was the birth of Rose, their daughter. 727 00:36:56,500 --> 00:36:59,500 Narrator: After surviving so much tragedy in De Smet, 728 00:36:59,533 --> 00:37:01,200 the young family heads south, 729 00:37:01,233 --> 00:37:03,500 eventually landing in the Ozarks, 730 00:37:03,533 --> 00:37:07,800 lured by the promise of "the land of big red apples." 731 00:37:07,833 --> 00:37:09,433 Like her parents before her, 732 00:37:09,466 --> 00:37:12,800 Wilder crosses the plains in a horse-drawn wagon. 733 00:37:12,833 --> 00:37:15,533 She records the trip in a tiny notebook, 734 00:37:15,566 --> 00:37:19,300 leaving a rare glimpse of her emotional self. 735 00:37:19,333 --> 00:37:22,033 Harper: "We crossed the James River, and in 20 minutes, 736 00:37:22,066 --> 00:37:25,033 we reached the top of the bluffs on the other side. 737 00:37:25,066 --> 00:37:27,933 We all stopped and looked back at the scene, 738 00:37:27,966 --> 00:37:32,566 and I wished for an artist's eye or a poet's brain 739 00:37:32,600 --> 00:37:35,766 or even to be able to tell in good, plain prose 740 00:37:35,800 --> 00:37:37,766 how beautiful it was. 741 00:37:37,800 --> 00:37:39,700 If I had been the Indians, 742 00:37:39,733 --> 00:37:42,433 I would have scalped more white folks 743 00:37:42,466 --> 00:37:46,333 before I ever would have left it." 744 00:37:46,366 --> 00:37:48,466 Fraser: She sees the... you know, the banks 745 00:37:48,500 --> 00:37:49,933 of this... this river 746 00:37:49,966 --> 00:37:52,300 and is, you know, kind of overcome 747 00:37:52,333 --> 00:37:54,866 with I think everything she's leaving behind. 748 00:37:54,900 --> 00:37:57,500 You know, she feels incredibly melancholy. 749 00:37:57,533 --> 00:38:01,533 I think she felt quite keenly the fact that... 750 00:38:01,566 --> 00:38:03,233 that she and Almanzo 751 00:38:03,266 --> 00:38:06,866 had, essentially, been failures as farmers 752 00:38:06,900 --> 00:38:09,300 and... and were being driven out of this place 753 00:38:09,333 --> 00:38:12,000 they could no longer stay in 754 00:38:12,033 --> 00:38:15,200 and... and that there was just nothing to be done about it. 755 00:38:15,233 --> 00:38:18,100 Narrator: Laura is 27 years old. 756 00:38:18,133 --> 00:38:21,000 The part of her life that would become her books 757 00:38:21,033 --> 00:38:23,466 is now behind her. 758 00:38:27,566 --> 00:38:30,966 ♪♪♪ 759 00:38:31,000 --> 00:38:34,933 Narrator: In 1894, the Wilders get their fresh start. 760 00:38:34,966 --> 00:38:37,733 They buy 40 acres with a one-room cabin 761 00:38:37,766 --> 00:38:40,166 and call it Rocky Ridge Farm. 762 00:38:40,200 --> 00:38:44,133 Laura had a clear vision of what it could become. 763 00:38:44,166 --> 00:38:47,700 Harper: "Everything we needed to build it was on the land... 764 00:38:47,733 --> 00:38:49,966 good oak beams and boards, 765 00:38:50,000 --> 00:38:53,233 stones for the foundations and the fireplace. 766 00:38:53,266 --> 00:38:55,733 The house would have large windows 767 00:38:55,766 --> 00:38:59,300 looking West across a brook over the gentle valleys 768 00:38:59,333 --> 00:39:02,266 and wooded hills that hid the town. 769 00:39:02,300 --> 00:39:03,700 The kitchen would be big enough 770 00:39:03,733 --> 00:39:05,466 to hold a wood stove for winter. 771 00:39:05,500 --> 00:39:07,066 And in the parlor... 772 00:39:07,100 --> 00:39:09,766 big book cases filled with books 773 00:39:09,800 --> 00:39:12,033 and a hanging lamp to read them by 774 00:39:12,066 --> 00:39:15,866 on winter evenings by the fireplace." 775 00:39:15,900 --> 00:39:17,033 Narrator: Laura Ingalls Wilder 776 00:39:17,066 --> 00:39:18,633 would live in Mansfield, Missouri, 777 00:39:18,666 --> 00:39:21,166 for the next 62 years, 778 00:39:21,200 --> 00:39:23,866 but until she became a best-selling author, 779 00:39:23,900 --> 00:39:27,300 life was a constant struggle to make ends meet. 780 00:39:27,333 --> 00:39:31,833 The couple always had second and third jobs. 781 00:39:31,866 --> 00:39:36,233 Laura raised chickens and took in boarders. 782 00:39:36,266 --> 00:39:38,433 Almanzo tended to the apple orchard 783 00:39:38,466 --> 00:39:40,766 and delivered kerosene. 784 00:39:40,800 --> 00:39:43,600 Their young daughter, Rose, picked huckleberries to sell 785 00:39:43,633 --> 00:39:47,566 and remembered her childhood none too fondly. 786 00:39:47,600 --> 00:39:49,800 Brenneman: "No one knew what went on in my mind. 787 00:39:49,833 --> 00:39:51,133 Because I loved my parents, 788 00:39:51,166 --> 00:39:53,800 I would not let them suspect that I was suffering. 789 00:39:53,833 --> 00:39:56,766 I concealed from them how much I felt their poverty, 790 00:39:56,800 --> 00:39:59,033 their struggles and disappointments. 791 00:39:59,066 --> 00:40:04,600 These filled my life, magnified like horrors in a dream." 792 00:40:04,633 --> 00:40:06,800 Narrator: In the spring of 1902, 793 00:40:06,833 --> 00:40:10,033 Laura receives word that her father is dying. 794 00:40:10,066 --> 00:40:13,500 [ Bell ringing ] 795 00:40:13,533 --> 00:40:17,666 She travels back to De Smet to see him one last time. 796 00:40:17,700 --> 00:40:19,033 Fraser: It must have been 797 00:40:19,066 --> 00:40:21,066 a really heartbreaking loss for her, 798 00:40:21,100 --> 00:40:25,900 because she always identified strongly with her father. 799 00:40:25,933 --> 00:40:27,866 They loved each other. 800 00:40:27,900 --> 00:40:32,033 She always referred to her earliest memories of him 801 00:40:32,066 --> 00:40:35,566 carrying her, you know, and singing to her, 802 00:40:35,600 --> 00:40:37,866 and, you know, gazing at her. 803 00:40:37,900 --> 00:40:43,533 And I think she felt a security and a closeness with him 804 00:40:43,566 --> 00:40:46,600 that she never felt with anybody else. 805 00:40:46,633 --> 00:40:49,933 Narrator: After Charles dies, Wilder writes an essay about him 806 00:40:49,966 --> 00:40:53,966 filled with the memories and music of her childhood. 807 00:40:54,000 --> 00:40:57,566 Harper: "All Father needed to make him happy was his family, 808 00:40:57,600 --> 00:41:01,066 a new, wild country to live in or travel over, 809 00:41:01,100 --> 00:41:04,700 good hunting and fishing, some traps, his gun, 810 00:41:04,733 --> 00:41:09,666 two good horses hitched to a rain-proof covered wagon, 811 00:41:09,700 --> 00:41:12,500 and his violin." 812 00:41:12,533 --> 00:41:14,066 Narrator: The next year, Rose leaves home 813 00:41:14,100 --> 00:41:16,433 to finish school in Louisiana. 814 00:41:16,466 --> 00:41:18,433 She is 16. 815 00:41:18,466 --> 00:41:21,300 Woodside: She thought that she had had the worst childhood ever 816 00:41:21,333 --> 00:41:23,066 and she couldn't wait to get away from the farm. 817 00:41:23,100 --> 00:41:25,600 For a long time, she felt that way. 818 00:41:25,633 --> 00:41:28,733 Sarah: She doesn't fit in the world that she's born into. 819 00:41:28,766 --> 00:41:32,066 It's too small. It doesn't suit her. 820 00:41:32,100 --> 00:41:33,366 She was stubborn. 821 00:41:33,400 --> 00:41:36,266 She was very, very forceful, I think, in her opinions. 822 00:41:36,300 --> 00:41:37,800 She taught herself to read. 823 00:41:37,833 --> 00:41:40,233 When she discovered, like, how to write 824 00:41:40,266 --> 00:41:43,166 she just loved the act of writing so much 825 00:41:43,200 --> 00:41:46,666 that she was harming her arm and her hand. 826 00:41:46,700 --> 00:41:48,700 They had to make her stop, 827 00:41:48,733 --> 00:41:51,766 and she was not but 4 or 5 years old. 828 00:41:51,800 --> 00:41:55,766 She just had this fascination right from the get-go 829 00:41:55,800 --> 00:41:59,200 with language, with words, with writing. 830 00:41:59,233 --> 00:42:02,066 Narrator: Fittingly, Rose went on to a career as a writer 831 00:42:02,100 --> 00:42:05,000 and then urges her mother to do the same. 832 00:42:05,033 --> 00:42:07,100 Sarah: Rose had always had this preoccupation 833 00:42:07,133 --> 00:42:10,533 with her parents' financial stability 834 00:42:10,566 --> 00:42:13,066 and for quite some time is urging her mother 835 00:42:13,100 --> 00:42:16,500 to do something in addition to supplement the farm income. 836 00:42:16,533 --> 00:42:20,366 So Rose encourages her to write. 837 00:42:20,400 --> 00:42:22,333 Narrator: And Laura begins writing articles 838 00:42:22,366 --> 00:42:25,566 for the Missouri Ruralist in 1911. 839 00:42:25,600 --> 00:42:28,733 Anderson: Laura Ingalls Wilder earned money 840 00:42:28,766 --> 00:42:33,133 as a country journalist and the secretary treasurer 841 00:42:33,166 --> 00:42:36,766 of the Mansfield Farm Loan Association. 842 00:42:36,800 --> 00:42:38,033 John: The articles that she wrote, 843 00:42:38,066 --> 00:42:41,133 about 1,000 words twice a month, 844 00:42:41,166 --> 00:42:44,366 were stories that helped people under... 845 00:42:44,400 --> 00:42:47,600 mainly women, because it's a women's page... 846 00:42:47,633 --> 00:42:50,333 understand who they were and what they were doing, 847 00:42:50,366 --> 00:42:52,166 how they could be better farmers, 848 00:42:52,200 --> 00:42:55,366 how they could be better community citizens. 849 00:42:55,400 --> 00:42:58,400 It's all about improving people, 850 00:42:58,433 --> 00:43:00,633 making them happier, 851 00:43:00,666 --> 00:43:04,833 and she's a... she's an ethicist. 852 00:43:04,866 --> 00:43:09,133 Hill: She already had an arsenal of writing skills under her belt 853 00:43:09,166 --> 00:43:12,766 when she started writing the "Little House" books. 854 00:43:12,800 --> 00:43:14,266 Anderson: And I think 855 00:43:14,300 --> 00:43:16,833 Laura Ingalls Wilder's early poverty 856 00:43:16,866 --> 00:43:22,066 challenged her to work hard, use her talents, 857 00:43:22,100 --> 00:43:26,566 and give 120% effort 858 00:43:26,600 --> 00:43:31,566 to edge them into middle-class somewhat security. 859 00:43:31,600 --> 00:43:33,066 [ Train whistle blows ] 860 00:43:33,100 --> 00:43:36,666 Narrator: In 1915, Wilder takes a train to San Francisco 861 00:43:36,700 --> 00:43:38,800 to visit Rose. 862 00:43:38,833 --> 00:43:42,966 Sarah: When the World's Fair is happening in San Francisco, 863 00:43:43,000 --> 00:43:47,100 Laura goes out there with an eye toward learning more from Rose, 864 00:43:47,133 --> 00:43:50,266 observing the Fair, you know, having... having this broader 865 00:43:50,300 --> 00:43:52,700 sort of pool of experiences to pull from, 866 00:43:52,733 --> 00:43:55,533 and also to be tutored by Rose 867 00:43:55,566 --> 00:43:59,666 so that her writing can be more commercial 868 00:43:59,700 --> 00:44:04,200 or reach a broader audience. 869 00:44:04,233 --> 00:44:06,366 Narrator: Rose is making $30 a week 870 00:44:06,400 --> 00:44:08,566 writing fictionalized, first-person accounts 871 00:44:08,600 --> 00:44:11,466 of criminals, hero cops, and stool pigeons 872 00:44:11,500 --> 00:44:13,700 for the San Francisco Bulletin. 873 00:44:13,733 --> 00:44:15,933 And her stories are advertised as having 874 00:44:15,966 --> 00:44:19,700 "the authority of truth, the power of reality." 875 00:44:19,733 --> 00:44:21,900 Hill: Rose became her mother's editor 876 00:44:21,933 --> 00:44:24,933 and urged Laura Ingalls Wilder to think big, 877 00:44:24,966 --> 00:44:28,300 to think beyond just writing for the Missouri Ruralist. 878 00:44:28,333 --> 00:44:29,833 Narrator: Wilder returns home, 879 00:44:29,866 --> 00:44:33,200 newly determined to find a larger audience. 880 00:44:33,233 --> 00:44:36,166 At Rose's suggestion, she eventually writes an article 881 00:44:36,200 --> 00:44:37,866 about her kitchen. 882 00:44:37,900 --> 00:44:39,700 It sells to Country Gentleman Magazine 883 00:44:39,733 --> 00:44:41,933 in 1924. 884 00:44:41,966 --> 00:44:46,500 Laura appears to have bristled during the editing process. 885 00:44:46,533 --> 00:44:48,733 Brenneman: "I'm sorry that, as you say, 886 00:44:48,766 --> 00:44:52,533 knowing it was my work that sold takes some of the joy out of it. 887 00:44:52,566 --> 00:44:55,966 Dearest Mama Bess, in some ways, you're like a frolicsome dog 888 00:44:56,000 --> 00:44:58,200 that won't stand still to listen. 889 00:44:58,233 --> 00:45:00,866 Please, please, listen. 890 00:45:00,900 --> 00:45:04,433 All I did on your story was an ordinary re-write job. 891 00:45:04,466 --> 00:45:08,700 You must understand that what sold was your article, edited. 892 00:45:08,733 --> 00:45:11,000 You must study how it was edited, and why, 893 00:45:11,033 --> 00:45:12,533 and just what was done, 894 00:45:12,566 --> 00:45:17,700 so that next time, you can do the editing yourself." 895 00:45:17,733 --> 00:45:20,733 Narrator: When Caroline Ingalls dies that same year, 896 00:45:20,766 --> 00:45:22,900 Wilder publishes an emotional column 897 00:45:22,933 --> 00:45:26,100 in the Missouri Ruralist about her mother. 898 00:45:26,133 --> 00:45:28,433 Harper: "The world seemed a lonesome place 899 00:45:28,466 --> 00:45:33,300 when Mother has passed away and only memories are left us. 900 00:45:33,333 --> 00:45:34,666 Memories. 901 00:45:34,700 --> 00:45:38,500 Sometimes I wonder if they are our treasures in heaven 902 00:45:38,533 --> 00:45:43,800 or the consuming fires of torment." 903 00:45:43,833 --> 00:45:47,300 Fraser: And it was really remarkable as a statement, 904 00:45:47,333 --> 00:45:50,300 because she's really reacting to her mother's death. 905 00:45:50,333 --> 00:45:55,500 And it shows you how very few 906 00:45:55,533 --> 00:46:00,033 spontaneous remarks we have from her. 907 00:46:00,066 --> 00:46:02,566 Most of what she wrote 908 00:46:02,600 --> 00:46:07,700 was very considered and restrained and controlled. 909 00:46:07,733 --> 00:46:12,066 But that one passage about her mother's death 910 00:46:12,100 --> 00:46:16,033 clearly just came in the moment. 911 00:46:16,066 --> 00:46:18,433 Narrator: Laura turns again to her family memories, 912 00:46:18,466 --> 00:46:21,700 writing to an elderly aunt in 1925 913 00:46:21,733 --> 00:46:25,066 asking for details about her mother's childhood. 914 00:46:25,100 --> 00:46:29,133 Harper: "Dear Aunt Martha, could you, I wonder, 915 00:46:29,166 --> 00:46:32,700 tell the story of those days and any special stories 916 00:46:32,733 --> 00:46:36,466 that you remember about the things that happened then? 917 00:46:36,500 --> 00:46:38,166 Just tell it in your own words 918 00:46:38,200 --> 00:46:40,966 as you would tell about those times 919 00:46:41,000 --> 00:46:43,200 if only you could talk to me." 920 00:46:43,233 --> 00:46:45,400 ♪♪♪ 921 00:46:45,433 --> 00:46:47,333 Narrator: In 1928, Rose... 922 00:46:47,366 --> 00:46:50,866 now Rose Wilder Lane after a failed marriage... 923 00:46:50,900 --> 00:46:53,500 returns home to live at Rocky Ridge. 924 00:46:53,533 --> 00:46:55,500 By now, she has traveled the world 925 00:46:55,533 --> 00:46:58,800 and is a highly paid writer. 926 00:46:58,833 --> 00:47:02,066 With her earnings, Rose builds her parents a modern house 927 00:47:02,100 --> 00:47:06,766 on a corner of the farm, and she spends lavishly. 928 00:47:06,800 --> 00:47:11,266 Then the Financial Crash of 1929 and the resulting Depression 929 00:47:11,300 --> 00:47:14,333 leaves the whole family in terrible straits. 930 00:47:14,366 --> 00:47:19,066 In her diary, Rose recalled just how bad things had become. 931 00:47:19,100 --> 00:47:22,133 Brenneman: "Our accounts are gone. This is the end. 932 00:47:22,166 --> 00:47:25,733 Price levels have fallen below costs." 933 00:47:25,766 --> 00:47:29,833 Narrator: By 1931, Laura had written the story of her life... 934 00:47:29,866 --> 00:47:31,966 "Pioneer Girl." 935 00:47:32,000 --> 00:47:36,033 Fraser: Writing the memoir is both her lifelong dream... 936 00:47:36,066 --> 00:47:39,433 you know, she has talked about this for a long time. 937 00:47:39,466 --> 00:47:42,733 But it's also very economically motivated, 938 00:47:42,766 --> 00:47:47,166 because I think Laura looks at her daughter 939 00:47:47,200 --> 00:47:49,766 and sees a woman who 940 00:47:49,800 --> 00:47:52,300 has been very successful in a lot of ways, 941 00:47:52,333 --> 00:47:54,100 has made a lot of money. 942 00:47:54,133 --> 00:47:56,000 Woodside: Rose took the manuscript, 943 00:47:56,033 --> 00:47:59,933 and she typed it all up, and she edited it as she went 944 00:47:59,966 --> 00:48:02,433 smoothed it over and gave it a little bit of structure, 945 00:48:02,466 --> 00:48:05,433 but she didn't do much to it at all. 946 00:48:05,466 --> 00:48:07,700 And the next time she went to New York 947 00:48:07,733 --> 00:48:10,533 to try to get work and see her agent, 948 00:48:10,566 --> 00:48:12,933 she tried to sell it. 949 00:48:12,966 --> 00:48:14,566 Narrator: With the Depression on, 950 00:48:14,600 --> 00:48:17,266 a memoir about the harsh realities of frontier life 951 00:48:17,300 --> 00:48:19,866 held no interest for publishers. 952 00:48:19,900 --> 00:48:23,666 "Pioneer Girl" is turned down everywhere. 953 00:48:23,700 --> 00:48:26,566 Without consulting her mother, Rose takes some passages 954 00:48:26,600 --> 00:48:27,866 from "Pioneer Girl," 955 00:48:27,900 --> 00:48:31,333 turns them into "When Grandma Was a Little Girl," 956 00:48:31,366 --> 00:48:34,833 and helps launch her mother as a children's author. 957 00:48:34,866 --> 00:48:37,366 Woodside: When you look at "Little House in the Big Woods," 958 00:48:37,400 --> 00:48:38,600 we see a lot of proof 959 00:48:38,633 --> 00:48:43,300 that Rose had a great deal of involvement in... 960 00:48:43,333 --> 00:48:48,100 in major revisions to that once they were expanding on it. 961 00:48:48,133 --> 00:48:49,933 Narrator: "Little House in the Big Woods," 962 00:48:49,966 --> 00:48:52,366 with illustrations by Helen Sewell, 963 00:48:52,400 --> 00:48:55,666 was published in April 1932. 964 00:48:55,700 --> 00:48:57,466 The 965 00:48:55,700 --> 00:48:57,466 New York Times book review praised 966 00:48:57,500 --> 00:49:00,966 its "refreshingly genuine and lifelike quality," 967 00:49:01,000 --> 00:49:03,666 noting that "the portrait of Laura's father 968 00:49:03,700 --> 00:49:07,000 is drawn with loving care and reality." 969 00:49:07,033 --> 00:49:09,033 Fraser: I think her relationship to her father 970 00:49:09,066 --> 00:49:12,600 is kind of unique in children's literature in a lot of ways. 971 00:49:12,633 --> 00:49:14,833 There are a lot of bad fathers 972 00:49:14,866 --> 00:49:16,533 [Laughing] in children's literature, 973 00:49:16,566 --> 00:49:20,166 a lot of scary, 974 00:49:20,200 --> 00:49:24,733 punitive, even abusive fathers. 975 00:49:24,766 --> 00:49:28,333 But her relationship to Charles Ingalls 976 00:49:28,366 --> 00:49:32,333 was really special in... in its closeness. 977 00:49:32,366 --> 00:49:34,433 John: Pa getting down on his hands and knees 978 00:49:34,466 --> 00:49:36,666 and playing mad dog with the girls 979 00:49:36,700 --> 00:49:38,466 and playing his fiddle 980 00:49:38,500 --> 00:49:41,733 and telling all the stories and everything, 981 00:49:41,766 --> 00:49:44,533 I think Pa was an unusual father for the time. 982 00:49:44,566 --> 00:49:46,200 He seems very modern 983 00:49:46,233 --> 00:49:49,533 in the way in which he connected with his girls. 984 00:49:49,566 --> 00:49:50,666 He didn't have any boys. 985 00:49:50,700 --> 00:49:52,966 Maybe that had something to do with it. 986 00:49:53,000 --> 00:49:57,133 ♪♪♪ 987 00:49:57,166 --> 00:49:58,966 Newsreel narrator: "Almost immediately upon taking office, 988 00:49:59,000 --> 00:50:01,766 the new President closed all banks by proclamation." 989 00:50:01,800 --> 00:50:04,466 Sarah: Politically, she's writing at a time 990 00:50:04,500 --> 00:50:08,500 when FDR is in the White House and is apparently never leaving, 991 00:50:08,533 --> 00:50:10,466 and she doesn't like him very much at all. 992 00:50:10,500 --> 00:50:12,833 And she feels that people 993 00:50:12,866 --> 00:50:16,300 are just... can't find their bootstraps. 994 00:50:16,333 --> 00:50:18,966 And I think that informs the way 995 00:50:19,000 --> 00:50:21,933 that she tells the story of her life 996 00:50:21,966 --> 00:50:24,766 to... to make the Ingalls family so independent 997 00:50:24,800 --> 00:50:26,700 and so self-reliant 998 00:50:26,733 --> 00:50:31,433 when that was not, in fact, always the case. 999 00:50:31,466 --> 00:50:32,733 Newsreel narrator: "Aimed at benefiting the farmer 1000 00:50:32,766 --> 00:50:35,266 by reducing wheat, corn, and cotton crops, 1001 00:50:35,300 --> 00:50:38,400 the AAA was enacted." 1002 00:50:38,433 --> 00:50:41,800 Woodside: They both were sort of physically ill over FDR 1003 00:50:41,833 --> 00:50:43,133 and the New Deal. 1004 00:50:43,166 --> 00:50:45,966 They felt that it was just 1005 00:50:46,000 --> 00:50:48,733 a really inappropriate response to hard times. 1006 00:50:48,766 --> 00:50:51,133 They had seen hard times. 1007 00:50:51,166 --> 00:50:53,300 Why did the government want to help people? 1008 00:50:53,333 --> 00:50:55,966 And Laura thought that everybody was starting to whine 1009 00:50:56,000 --> 00:50:57,433 in response to the New Deal. 1010 00:50:57,466 --> 00:51:00,333 She just couldn't stand it. It made her sick. 1011 00:51:00,366 --> 00:51:02,300 Harper: "Lord, give me patience! 1012 00:51:02,333 --> 00:51:07,300 How exasperating a bunch of Communists in Washington can be! 1013 00:51:07,333 --> 00:51:09,466 [ Sighs ] I suppose all we can do 1014 00:51:09,500 --> 00:51:11,233 is await their pleasure. 1015 00:51:11,266 --> 00:51:14,466 Give them time enough, and they will put us all 1016 00:51:14,500 --> 00:51:19,166 on the Federal payroll or on the relief." 1017 00:51:19,200 --> 00:51:21,033 Narrator: Ironically, the Wilders themselves 1018 00:51:21,066 --> 00:51:24,066 had already benefited from a federal program... 1019 00:51:24,100 --> 00:51:26,400 a farm loan taken when Laura was working 1020 00:51:26,433 --> 00:51:29,333 at the Mansfield Farm Loan Association. 1021 00:51:29,366 --> 00:51:31,333 ♪♪♪ 1022 00:51:31,366 --> 00:51:33,700 Debuting in the early days of the Depression, 1023 00:51:33,733 --> 00:51:35,366 "Little House in the Big Woods" 1024 00:51:35,400 --> 00:51:38,333 seemed tailor-made for the times. 1025 00:51:38,366 --> 00:51:41,300 Fraser: And so I think she had 1026 00:51:41,333 --> 00:51:45,866 a bit of a message there for children about poverty, 1027 00:51:45,900 --> 00:51:48,533 that it's nothing to be ashamed of. 1028 00:51:48,566 --> 00:51:52,966 If there's love in the family, if there's pleasures 1029 00:51:53,000 --> 00:51:57,700 in life from a simple meal or from music, 1030 00:51:57,733 --> 00:52:02,566 that that's enough in life. 1031 00:52:02,600 --> 00:52:05,266 Anderson: Without being overly moralistic, 1032 00:52:05,300 --> 00:52:07,233 the "Little House" books stressed 1033 00:52:07,266 --> 00:52:11,100 self-responsibility, community cooperation, 1034 00:52:11,133 --> 00:52:14,133 taking care of one's needs oneself, 1035 00:52:14,166 --> 00:52:19,633 and with these goals, a person could be free and independent. 1036 00:52:19,666 --> 00:52:21,233 Narrator: After such a good reception 1037 00:52:21,266 --> 00:52:23,133 for "Little House in the Big Woods," 1038 00:52:23,166 --> 00:52:26,733 the question was what to do next. 1039 00:52:26,766 --> 00:52:29,400 Woodside: Laura's idea evidently was, "Well, let... 1040 00:52:29,433 --> 00:52:33,166 Well, okay, we've done my... my life story, 1041 00:52:33,200 --> 00:52:36,400 so now let's do my husband's life story." 1042 00:52:36,433 --> 00:52:37,833 Wilder: "Farmer Boy" was written 1043 00:52:37,866 --> 00:52:41,300 from facts and stories Almanzo told me. 1044 00:52:41,333 --> 00:52:43,166 They are all true. 1045 00:52:43,200 --> 00:52:46,533 The old house just as described in the book 1046 00:52:46,566 --> 00:52:51,900 still stands on the old farm where Almanzo worked and played 1047 00:52:51,933 --> 00:52:55,333 and went fishing on rainy days. 1048 00:52:55,366 --> 00:52:57,066 Woodside: Laura sat down with Almanzo 1049 00:52:57,100 --> 00:53:01,000 probably in the evenings and mined his memory for things, 1050 00:53:01,033 --> 00:53:05,300 and she wrote a manuscript of "Farmer Boy," 1051 00:53:05,333 --> 00:53:08,900 and then Rose edited it fairly quickly, and they sent it in, 1052 00:53:08,933 --> 00:53:11,866 and they had to rewrite that one completely. 1053 00:53:11,900 --> 00:53:14,066 Narrator: As part of improving the manuscript, 1054 00:53:14,100 --> 00:53:15,566 Rose took a research trip 1055 00:53:15,600 --> 00:53:18,333 to Malone, New York, her father's birthplace. 1056 00:53:18,366 --> 00:53:21,066 After substantial revisions with Rose, 1057 00:53:21,100 --> 00:53:24,266 Laura resubmits "Farmer Boy." 1058 00:53:24,300 --> 00:53:26,033 Raymond: "My Dear Mrs. Wilder, 1059 00:53:26,066 --> 00:53:28,533 I have finished reading the new version of 'Farmer Boy.' 1060 00:53:28,566 --> 00:53:30,433 And I feel it is a much more cohesive 1061 00:53:30,466 --> 00:53:33,266 piece of work than before." 1062 00:53:33,300 --> 00:53:36,166 Hill: Somewhere as she was writing that second book, 1063 00:53:36,200 --> 00:53:39,133 she began to think in broader terms. 1064 00:53:39,166 --> 00:53:42,533 So when we get to "Little House on the Prairie," 1065 00:53:42,566 --> 00:53:44,600 that's a totally different kind of book, 1066 00:53:44,633 --> 00:53:46,866 and here, for the first time, 1067 00:53:46,900 --> 00:53:49,833 we kind of see Laura Ingalls Wilder's vision 1068 00:53:49,866 --> 00:53:52,233 for the series about the West 1069 00:53:52,266 --> 00:53:55,100 and about how the West was settled. 1070 00:53:55,133 --> 00:53:57,200 Harper: "I am satisfied with the title 1071 00:53:57,233 --> 00:53:58,933 'Little House on the Prairie.' 1072 00:53:58,966 --> 00:54:02,300 I suggested it thinking it had a selling value 1073 00:54:02,333 --> 00:54:06,366 because of the other 'Little House' stories." 1074 00:54:06,400 --> 00:54:07,866 Narrator: "Little House On The Prairie" 1075 00:54:07,900 --> 00:54:10,966 is followed by "On the Banks of Plum Creek," 1076 00:54:11,000 --> 00:54:14,400 and the books will soon be marketed as a series. 1077 00:54:14,433 --> 00:54:16,533 "Plum Creek" is the first of Wilder's books 1078 00:54:16,566 --> 00:54:19,833 to receive a runner-up honor from the Newbery Awards, 1079 00:54:19,866 --> 00:54:21,833 the coveted stamp from librarians 1080 00:54:21,866 --> 00:54:25,300 that signals distinguished children's literature. 1081 00:54:25,333 --> 00:54:27,100 Fraser: I think the books had great word of mouth 1082 00:54:27,133 --> 00:54:30,300 among librarians and... and school teachers, 1083 00:54:30,333 --> 00:54:33,300 who began reading them to their classes. 1084 00:54:33,333 --> 00:54:34,866 Teacher: Describe Laura. 1085 00:54:34,900 --> 00:54:37,700 What is her personality like? 1086 00:54:37,733 --> 00:54:39,333 Anderson: They simply became part 1087 00:54:39,366 --> 00:54:43,233 of many, many teachers' curriculums. 1088 00:54:43,266 --> 00:54:46,033 And I think the teachers loved reading the books 1089 00:54:46,066 --> 00:54:48,733 and introducing them to the children. 1090 00:54:48,766 --> 00:54:51,766 And the children responded well. 1091 00:54:51,800 --> 00:54:54,000 Narrator: When "Plum Creek" is about to go on sale, 1092 00:54:54,033 --> 00:54:56,700 Wilder appears at the Detroit Book Fair, 1093 00:54:56,733 --> 00:55:00,300 her first and only time on a national stage. 1094 00:55:00,333 --> 00:55:02,800 There, her description of how the "Little House" books 1095 00:55:02,833 --> 00:55:06,866 came to be becomes a bigger and better story. 1096 00:55:06,900 --> 00:55:09,733 Harper: "I wanted the children now to understand more 1097 00:55:09,766 --> 00:55:12,900 about the beginning of things... 1098 00:55:12,933 --> 00:55:16,933 to know what is behind the things they see, 1099 00:55:16,966 --> 00:55:21,166 what it is that made America as they know it." 1100 00:55:21,200 --> 00:55:22,933 Narrator: With these remarks to booksellers, 1101 00:55:22,966 --> 00:55:25,000 Wilder is mythologizing... 1102 00:55:25,033 --> 00:55:28,066 about the perpetual promise of moving West... 1103 00:55:28,100 --> 00:55:30,100 and about herself. 1104 00:55:30,133 --> 00:55:32,466 Sarah: Laura Ingalls Wilder had a lot of responsibility 1105 00:55:32,500 --> 00:55:34,300 in... in forming the myth. 1106 00:55:34,333 --> 00:55:36,300 Just always insisted that everything in the books 1107 00:55:36,333 --> 00:55:38,100 was true, true, true. 1108 00:55:38,133 --> 00:55:42,033 And Rose also, you know, went on with that legacy, 1109 00:55:42,066 --> 00:55:47,100 that insistence that this was biographical 1110 00:55:47,133 --> 00:55:49,666 more than fiction. 1111 00:55:49,700 --> 00:55:52,600 And it's... it's just not so. 1112 00:55:52,633 --> 00:55:54,666 Narrator: And yet at the close of her speech, 1113 00:55:54,700 --> 00:55:56,500 Wilder pointedly says, 1114 00:55:56,533 --> 00:56:01,233 "All I have told is true but not the whole truth." 1115 00:56:01,266 --> 00:56:04,300 Fraser: [ Chuckling ] It's very clear that she wanted to believe 1116 00:56:04,333 --> 00:56:05,566 her own fiction. 1117 00:56:05,600 --> 00:56:10,233 You know, she began trying to sell it as the truth. 1118 00:56:10,266 --> 00:56:14,600 And so that's, you know, what we keep coming back to it for 1119 00:56:14,633 --> 00:56:17,966 is... is to f... try to figure that out. 1120 00:56:18,000 --> 00:56:19,700 And yet, part of the joy 1121 00:56:19,733 --> 00:56:23,666 of reading the books is... is their emotionalism. 1122 00:56:23,700 --> 00:56:26,466 And that's what keeps people coming back to it. 1123 00:56:26,500 --> 00:56:30,166 It's not because they're political texts. 1124 00:56:30,200 --> 00:56:34,633 It's not because they have something to say about, 1125 00:56:34,666 --> 00:56:37,966 you know, pulling yourself up by your bootstraps, 1126 00:56:38,000 --> 00:56:40,400 although they do. 1127 00:56:40,433 --> 00:56:43,233 But that's not why people read them. 1128 00:56:43,266 --> 00:56:45,200 Narrator: The letters between Rose and Laura 1129 00:56:45,233 --> 00:56:46,766 during writing of the fifth novel, 1130 00:56:46,800 --> 00:56:48,766 "By the Shores of Silver Lake," 1131 00:56:48,800 --> 00:56:52,033 reveal how mother and daughter worked together. 1132 00:56:52,066 --> 00:56:54,433 Woodside: Rose had the gift of structuring the novel. 1133 00:56:54,466 --> 00:56:57,000 She understood if you're narrating a novel, 1134 00:56:57,033 --> 00:57:00,400 it must be through whatever narrative voice you choose. 1135 00:57:00,433 --> 00:57:02,233 Laura did not know anything about that, 1136 00:57:02,266 --> 00:57:03,600 so she would say... 1137 00:57:03,633 --> 00:57:06,433 There's a famous letter where she writes her about... 1138 00:57:06,466 --> 00:57:08,100 you know, "This is Laura's story. 1139 00:57:08,133 --> 00:57:10,800 You must stay inside Laura." 1140 00:57:10,833 --> 00:57:14,066 Brenneman: "Try always to make sight, scent, 1141 00:57:14,100 --> 00:57:17,766 sensation immediate. 1142 00:57:17,800 --> 00:57:20,633 'So Laura took the lines in her hands, ' is better than, 1143 00:57:20,666 --> 00:57:23,033 'so Laura drove the black ponies.' 1144 00:57:23,066 --> 00:57:26,100 Get it all directly, as sight, emotion, 1145 00:57:26,133 --> 00:57:27,966 thought, scent. 1146 00:57:28,000 --> 00:57:30,966 Don't say, 'It reminded Laura of other times.' 1147 00:57:31,000 --> 00:57:34,033 Say, 'This was like other times.' 1148 00:57:34,066 --> 00:57:37,533 Stay inside Laura." 1149 00:57:37,566 --> 00:57:38,900 Narrator: There were many arguments 1150 00:57:38,933 --> 00:57:42,966 over how "By the Shores of Silver Lake" should start. 1151 00:57:43,000 --> 00:57:45,633 Brenneman: "Dear Mama Bess, I still think the place to begin 1152 00:57:45,666 --> 00:57:47,300 is on the house on Plum Creek. 1153 00:57:47,333 --> 00:57:49,900 There are four years to skip if Laura is 12. 1154 00:57:49,933 --> 00:57:53,200 She was 8 in Plum Creek when she started to school. 1155 00:57:53,233 --> 00:57:54,533 Therefore, the more nearly 1156 00:57:54,566 --> 00:57:56,900 you can tie the two books together, the better, 1157 00:57:56,933 --> 00:57:59,300 and the house on Plum Creek will do that. 1158 00:57:59,333 --> 00:58:01,200 It seems to me that this book is about 1159 00:58:01,233 --> 00:58:03,000 railroad and town-building. 1160 00:58:03,033 --> 00:58:06,133 Let's get the theme of this one clear right away." 1161 00:58:06,166 --> 00:58:08,166 Harper: "Rose dearest, 1162 00:58:08,200 --> 00:58:11,766 to make the changes you want to make in Silver Lake, 1163 00:58:11,800 --> 00:58:15,300 it will have to be practically rewritten. 1164 00:58:15,333 --> 00:58:18,966 The theme of Silver Lake is homesteading. 1165 00:58:19,000 --> 00:58:22,266 I am sure this is all plain in the story. 1166 00:58:22,300 --> 00:58:24,666 I have given you a true picture of the time 1167 00:58:24,700 --> 00:58:27,033 and the place and the people. 1168 00:58:27,066 --> 00:58:29,700 Please don't blur it. 1169 00:58:29,733 --> 00:58:32,166 But I know you won't." 1170 00:58:32,200 --> 00:58:35,433 Brenneman: "Dear Mama Bess, you are one of the very few writers 1171 00:58:35,466 --> 00:58:37,866 in the country who would turn down a collaboration 1172 00:58:37,900 --> 00:58:41,133 with Rose Wilder Lane, but go ahead. 1173 00:58:41,166 --> 00:58:42,833 You certainly are handling the material 1174 00:58:42,866 --> 00:58:44,033 much better all the time, 1175 00:58:44,066 --> 00:58:46,066 and if you don't want this book touched, 1176 00:58:46,100 --> 00:58:49,433 you're absolutely right not to have it touched." 1177 00:58:49,466 --> 00:58:51,233 Narrator: And if Rose had prevailed, 1178 00:58:51,266 --> 00:58:53,900 Mary would never have been blind. 1179 00:58:53,933 --> 00:58:57,033 Brenneman: "I am still doubtful about Mary's being blind. 1180 00:58:57,066 --> 00:59:00,133 Why? If she must be blind, her blindness 1181 00:59:00,166 --> 00:59:03,100 should be brought in as the end of an illness. 1182 00:59:03,133 --> 00:59:05,166 I can handle this, if you agree to it. 1183 00:59:05,200 --> 00:59:06,366 Only write me a letter 1184 00:59:06,400 --> 00:59:09,733 telling me all about what actually happened." 1185 00:59:09,766 --> 00:59:11,466 Narrator: But Laura insisted. 1186 00:59:11,500 --> 00:59:15,000 Harper: "I can't take Mary along in the story 1187 00:59:15,033 --> 00:59:18,766 as she should be if she were not blind. 1188 00:59:18,800 --> 00:59:20,600 She would not fit in. 1189 00:59:20,633 --> 00:59:24,633 A touch of tragedy makes the story truer to life 1190 00:59:24,666 --> 00:59:27,400 and showing the way we all took it 1191 00:59:27,433 --> 00:59:31,933 illustrates the spirit of the times and the frontier." 1192 00:59:31,966 --> 00:59:33,900 Narrator: Wilder's description of Mary's blindness 1193 00:59:33,933 --> 00:59:36,900 is arguably one of the most affecting scenes 1194 00:59:36,933 --> 00:59:39,266 in all of her books. 1195 00:59:39,300 --> 00:59:41,866 Young woman: "Her blue eyes were still beautiful, 1196 00:59:41,900 --> 00:59:44,300 but they did not know what was before them, 1197 00:59:44,333 --> 00:59:46,933 and Mary herself could never look through them again 1198 00:59:46,966 --> 00:59:51,200 to tell Laura what she was thinking without saying a word." 1199 00:59:51,233 --> 00:59:53,066 Narrator: While they are working on "Silver Lake," 1200 00:59:53,100 --> 00:59:55,366 Rose writes to her mother about their partnership 1201 00:59:55,400 --> 00:59:58,766 and gives her very specific advice. 1202 00:59:58,800 --> 01:00:02,433 Brenneman: "As to similarity in our writing, of course. 1203 01:00:02,466 --> 01:00:04,600 You often write lines and whole paragraphs 1204 01:00:04,633 --> 01:00:06,266 that I feel are what I would have written 1205 01:00:06,300 --> 01:00:08,866 or, anyway, wish I had. 1206 01:00:08,900 --> 01:00:11,233 What you haven't developed is structure, 1207 01:00:11,266 --> 01:00:14,200 a kind of under-rhythm in the whole body of the writing, 1208 01:00:14,233 --> 01:00:16,766 and a 'pointing up' here and there. 1209 01:00:16,800 --> 01:00:19,433 English is an impressionistic language, 1210 01:00:19,466 --> 01:00:22,533 an onomatopoeic language. 1211 01:00:22,566 --> 01:00:27,100 It has the quality of a sunrise or a landscape, 1212 01:00:27,133 --> 01:00:28,900 a meaning in feeling. 1213 01:00:28,933 --> 01:00:31,966 Essentially, it is poetry." 1214 01:00:32,000 --> 01:00:34,600 Woodside: I would call it a full-blown collaboration. 1215 01:00:34,633 --> 01:00:37,066 They were partners in the project. 1216 01:00:37,100 --> 01:00:40,566 They conceived it together, they wrote it together, 1217 01:00:40,600 --> 01:00:43,700 and they edited it together. 1218 01:00:43,733 --> 01:00:45,900 Hill: She was a fine editor. 1219 01:00:45,933 --> 01:00:49,200 And I think we're all indebted to her editorial skills 1220 01:00:49,233 --> 01:00:51,700 on the "Little House" books. 1221 01:00:51,733 --> 01:00:55,133 Fraser: She's not easy to like always, 1222 01:00:55,166 --> 01:00:57,200 and yet it's very doubtful 1223 01:00:57,233 --> 01:01:00,366 that we... we would have the "Little House" books 1224 01:01:00,400 --> 01:01:03,333 if it weren't for Rose with her encouragement, 1225 01:01:03,366 --> 01:01:05,066 her urging her mother on, 1226 01:01:05,100 --> 01:01:08,200 her bullying her mother sometimes, 1227 01:01:08,233 --> 01:01:10,900 her professional connections 1228 01:01:10,933 --> 01:01:14,000 to agents and publishers in New York. 1229 01:01:14,033 --> 01:01:17,000 She was crucial in this whole thing. 1230 01:01:17,033 --> 01:01:20,533 Anderson: Rose was at the apex of her career, 1231 01:01:20,566 --> 01:01:25,233 writing short stories, magazine serials, 1232 01:01:25,266 --> 01:01:28,400 novels, and works of nonfiction. 1233 01:01:28,433 --> 01:01:33,600 She wanted no taint of being involved with children's books. 1234 01:01:33,633 --> 01:01:36,833 The children's book publishing field in the 1930s 1235 01:01:36,866 --> 01:01:40,733 and '40s was minuscule 1236 01:01:40,766 --> 01:01:43,566 in comparison with what it is today. 1237 01:01:43,600 --> 01:01:48,400 And it was simply not Rose's wish to get recognized 1238 01:01:48,433 --> 01:01:52,300 as the co-author or editor of her mother's books. 1239 01:01:52,333 --> 01:01:56,300 And Rose denied any connection with those books 1240 01:01:56,333 --> 01:01:58,866 to her dying day. 1241 01:01:58,900 --> 01:02:00,800 Narrator: In fact, Rose had appropriated 1242 01:02:00,833 --> 01:02:03,700 her mother's childhood for her own material. 1243 01:02:03,733 --> 01:02:05,533 Her novel "Let the Hurricane Roar" 1244 01:02:05,566 --> 01:02:07,800 is based on the Ingalls family. 1245 01:02:07,833 --> 01:02:11,466 But Rose would become best known for her political theories. 1246 01:02:11,500 --> 01:02:14,066 Her non-fiction book "The Discovery of Freedom" 1247 01:02:14,100 --> 01:02:16,133 was published in 1943 1248 01:02:16,166 --> 01:02:21,300 and became fuel for the founding of the Libertarian Party. 1249 01:02:21,333 --> 01:02:24,566 Around the same time, Laura's editor, Ursula Nordstrom, 1250 01:02:24,600 --> 01:02:28,833 decides it's time for a new edition and new illustrations. 1251 01:02:28,866 --> 01:02:30,466 She taps Garth Williams, 1252 01:02:30,500 --> 01:02:33,033 the illustrator of children's book "Stuart Little" 1253 01:02:33,066 --> 01:02:36,200 and later "Charlotte's Web." 1254 01:02:36,233 --> 01:02:40,400 Williams meets Wilder at her farmhouse in 1947. 1255 01:02:40,433 --> 01:02:42,333 Williams: She was very lively. 1256 01:02:42,366 --> 01:02:44,833 And she was fixing her garden, and I sat in the car. 1257 01:02:44,866 --> 01:02:46,433 She didn't know I was there. 1258 01:02:46,466 --> 01:02:48,466 And I watched her, and she was picking flowers. 1259 01:02:48,500 --> 01:02:51,500 And she bent right down, and she picked up flowers 1260 01:02:51,533 --> 01:02:53,633 without any trouble at all. 1261 01:02:53,666 --> 01:02:55,066 And I said, "Well, my goodness, 1262 01:02:55,100 --> 01:03:00,400 she looks about 20 or 30 years younger than she really is." 1263 01:03:00,433 --> 01:03:03,400 Narrator: Wilder shared her family photos, artifacts, 1264 01:03:03,433 --> 01:03:05,500 and the details of her life. 1265 01:03:05,533 --> 01:03:08,233 Williams wrote down his impressions. 1266 01:03:08,266 --> 01:03:10,966 Man: "An architect would have described the sod house 1267 01:03:11,000 --> 01:03:12,866 on the bank of Plum Creek 1268 01:03:12,900 --> 01:03:16,733 as extremely primitive, unhealthy, and undesirable. 1269 01:03:16,766 --> 01:03:20,700 But to Laura's fresh young eyes, it was a pleasant house, 1270 01:03:20,733 --> 01:03:24,466 surrounded by flowers and with the music of a running stream 1271 01:03:24,500 --> 01:03:26,366 and rustling leaves. 1272 01:03:26,400 --> 01:03:29,633 She understood the meaning of hardship and struggle. 1273 01:03:29,666 --> 01:03:31,866 She never glamorized anything, 1274 01:03:31,900 --> 01:03:35,100 yet she saw the loveliness in everything. 1275 01:03:35,133 --> 01:03:38,000 This was the way the illustrator had to follow... 1276 01:03:38,033 --> 01:03:41,766 No glamorizing for him, either." 1277 01:03:41,800 --> 01:03:44,400 Narrator: Shortly before the new editions were released, 1278 01:03:44,433 --> 01:03:46,000 editor Nordstrom attended 1279 01:03:46,033 --> 01:03:48,866 to some troubling aspects of the text. 1280 01:03:48,900 --> 01:03:51,466 A letter from the aunt of an 8-year-old girl 1281 01:03:51,500 --> 01:03:54,266 took issue with a passage from "Little House on the Prairie" 1282 01:03:54,300 --> 01:03:56,533 that read, "There were no people. 1283 01:03:56,566 --> 01:03:59,000 Only Indians lived there." 1284 01:03:59,033 --> 01:04:02,400 Responding to the complaint, Nordstrom said... 1285 01:04:02,433 --> 01:04:04,833 Woman: "I must admit to you that no one here realized 1286 01:04:04,866 --> 01:04:06,633 that those words read as they did. 1287 01:04:06,666 --> 01:04:08,933 Reading them now, it seems unbelievable to me 1288 01:04:08,966 --> 01:04:11,133 that you are the only person who has picked this up 1289 01:04:11,166 --> 01:04:14,200 in the 20 years since the book was published." 1290 01:04:14,233 --> 01:04:17,433 Narrator: "A stupid blunder of mine," Wilder wrote. 1291 01:04:17,466 --> 01:04:19,066 "Of course Indians are people, 1292 01:04:19,100 --> 01:04:22,133 and I did not mean to imply that they were not." 1293 01:04:22,166 --> 01:04:26,500 The sentence was changed to "There were no settlers." 1294 01:04:26,533 --> 01:04:27,866 Beane: So, there was the line, 1295 01:04:27,900 --> 01:04:29,833 "There were no people, only Indians," 1296 01:04:29,866 --> 01:04:31,600 when they're coming into the territory. 1297 01:04:31,633 --> 01:04:33,933 And in the 1950s, 1298 01:04:33,966 --> 01:04:36,133 they struck out the word "people" 1299 01:04:36,166 --> 01:04:38,466 and put in "settlers." 1300 01:04:38,500 --> 01:04:43,566 And it still said, "There were no settlers, only Indians." 1301 01:04:43,600 --> 01:04:48,433 And why are we "only"? What does that mean for us? 1302 01:04:48,466 --> 01:04:52,400 And what message does this give our children? 1303 01:04:52,433 --> 01:04:57,033 John: They had been there for centuries, if not millennia. 1304 01:04:57,066 --> 01:05:00,300 So Laura was typical of her times 1305 01:05:00,333 --> 01:05:04,033 and not really having an understanding of 1306 01:05:04,066 --> 01:05:09,066 or appreciating the Native American history. 1307 01:05:09,100 --> 01:05:12,600 Park: Even as a young child, there were parts of the books 1308 01:05:12,633 --> 01:05:15,600 that made me really uncomfortable or unhappy, 1309 01:05:15,633 --> 01:05:17,900 that I just didn't like reading. 1310 01:05:17,933 --> 01:05:22,033 And how this manifested to me personally was 1311 01:05:22,066 --> 01:05:25,433 there's a passage in which Laura is fascinated 1312 01:05:25,466 --> 01:05:30,033 by an Indian baby's very dark eyes. 1313 01:05:30,066 --> 01:05:31,400 Young woman: "Then came a mother riding, 1314 01:05:31,433 --> 01:05:34,500 with a baby in a basket on each side of her pony. 1315 01:05:34,533 --> 01:05:36,266 Laura looked straight into the bright eyes 1316 01:05:36,300 --> 01:05:38,233 of the little baby nearer her. 1317 01:05:38,266 --> 01:05:41,533 Only its small head showed above the basket's rim. 1318 01:05:41,566 --> 01:05:43,333 Its hair was as black as a crow, 1319 01:05:43,366 --> 01:05:46,866 and its eyes were black as night when no stars shine. 1320 01:05:46,900 --> 01:05:49,400 Those black eyes looked deep into Laura's eyes, 1321 01:05:49,433 --> 01:05:50,633 and she looked deep down 1322 01:05:50,666 --> 01:05:53,266 into the blackness of that little baby's eyes, 1323 01:05:53,300 --> 01:05:56,466 and she wanted that one little baby." 1324 01:05:56,500 --> 01:05:57,900 Park: I had very dark eyes. 1325 01:05:57,933 --> 01:05:59,900 So in my childhood mind, 1326 01:05:59,933 --> 01:06:04,000 when Ma said horrible things about Native Americans, 1327 01:06:04,033 --> 01:06:07,266 it felt like she was saying horrible things about me. 1328 01:06:07,300 --> 01:06:10,133 Gay: I think I first started reading the books in 1981. 1329 01:06:10,166 --> 01:06:13,766 So we had very different sensibilities then. 1330 01:06:13,800 --> 01:06:16,666 It didn't even occur to anyone to think anything 1331 01:06:16,700 --> 01:06:20,000 of the depictions of Indians in those books. 1332 01:06:20,033 --> 01:06:22,533 And I think that's deeply unfortunate, 1333 01:06:22,566 --> 01:06:24,533 and it shows just how much work we had to do 1334 01:06:24,566 --> 01:06:29,033 with regards to recognizing the racism of those books. 1335 01:06:29,066 --> 01:06:31,433 Narrator: Nordstrom also asked Wilder to consider 1336 01:06:31,466 --> 01:06:34,500 cutting a scene from "Little Town on the Prairie" 1337 01:06:34,533 --> 01:06:40,133 in which Pa appears in blackface and sings a racist song. 1338 01:06:40,166 --> 01:06:44,333 Wilder agreed, and some of the offending lyrics were trimmed, 1339 01:06:44,366 --> 01:06:47,066 but the word "darkies" and the illustration 1340 01:06:47,100 --> 01:06:49,766 can still be found in the book today. 1341 01:06:49,800 --> 01:06:51,666 Hill: I know some colleagues have said 1342 01:06:51,700 --> 01:06:55,100 that they wish those scenes would be cut 1343 01:06:55,133 --> 01:06:57,500 from new versions of the book. 1344 01:06:57,533 --> 01:07:00,700 I don't agree with that. 1345 01:07:00,733 --> 01:07:04,000 It's very disturbing, but it is part of our history, 1346 01:07:04,033 --> 01:07:07,000 and if we don't talk about these issues honestly 1347 01:07:07,033 --> 01:07:09,966 with our children, 1348 01:07:10,000 --> 01:07:12,800 we are jeopardizing their future 1349 01:07:12,833 --> 01:07:15,166 and the future of our country. 1350 01:07:15,200 --> 01:07:17,366 Gay: The books just have to be taught in context, 1351 01:07:17,400 --> 01:07:21,100 and the proper context, not revisionist context. 1352 01:07:21,133 --> 01:07:24,566 Teacher: Brainstorm in your groups some new names 1353 01:07:24,600 --> 01:07:28,800 that may be more respectful to the Native American culture. 1354 01:07:28,833 --> 01:07:31,433 Erdrich: What I see these books as, basically, 1355 01:07:31,466 --> 01:07:34,500 I would say they're like "Gone with the Wind" for kids. 1356 01:07:34,533 --> 01:07:38,733 Kids are certainly gonna love "Little House." 1357 01:07:38,766 --> 01:07:40,800 Grown-ups like "Gone with the Wind." 1358 01:07:40,833 --> 01:07:43,000 But what is it, really? 1359 01:07:43,033 --> 01:07:49,133 It's a way of valorizing 1360 01:07:49,166 --> 01:07:55,066 the things that destroyed entire peoples 1361 01:07:55,100 --> 01:07:58,033 in this country. 1362 01:07:58,066 --> 01:07:59,466 Narrator: The racist scenes 1363 01:07:59,500 --> 01:08:02,400 moved the American Library Association to rename 1364 01:08:02,433 --> 01:08:06,133 its Laura Ingalls Wilder Lifetime Achievement Award. 1365 01:08:06,166 --> 01:08:08,466 ♪♪♪ 1366 01:08:08,500 --> 01:08:10,866 In 2018, it was changed 1367 01:08:10,900 --> 01:08:14,300 to the Children's Literature Legacy Award. 1368 01:08:14,333 --> 01:08:16,266 Goldberg: They took the name off of the award 1369 01:08:16,300 --> 01:08:18,433 because they didn't feel they could hold up 1370 01:08:18,466 --> 01:08:23,500 Laura Ingalls Wilder as a contemporary role model 1371 01:08:23,533 --> 01:08:26,233 for young readers. 1372 01:08:26,266 --> 01:08:30,166 The books are dehumanizing to children of color. 1373 01:08:30,200 --> 01:08:32,733 And they have a lot of really damaging messages 1374 01:08:32,766 --> 01:08:35,333 for... for white children. 1375 01:08:35,366 --> 01:08:37,233 Park: I was hurt by those books. 1376 01:08:37,266 --> 01:08:41,066 And that took me 50 years to reconcile. 1377 01:08:41,100 --> 01:08:43,033 Because the books that we love as children, 1378 01:08:43,066 --> 01:08:44,700 oh, they're part of us. Right? 1379 01:08:44,733 --> 01:08:49,066 They're... They're... They're so much a part of our identity. 1380 01:08:49,100 --> 01:08:52,533 ♪♪♪ 1381 01:08:52,566 --> 01:08:55,366 Narrator: While her books were growing in popularity, 1382 01:08:55,400 --> 01:08:59,900 Laura and Almanzo spent their time downsizing. 1383 01:08:59,933 --> 01:09:01,600 They sold most of their land 1384 01:09:01,633 --> 01:09:05,166 and moved back into their original farmhouse. 1385 01:09:05,200 --> 01:09:08,700 Rose had settled in Connecticut. 1386 01:09:08,733 --> 01:09:11,366 And in the fall of 1949, 1387 01:09:11,400 --> 01:09:15,400 Wilder's beloved Manly suffers a heart attack and dies. 1388 01:09:15,433 --> 01:09:16,833 Her farmer boy, 1389 01:09:16,866 --> 01:09:22,166 her steadfast partner of 64 years, was gone. 1390 01:09:22,200 --> 01:09:27,466 Hill: Almanzo Wilder, I think, was a very tolerant man. 1391 01:09:27,500 --> 01:09:29,666 He had a headstrong wife, 1392 01:09:29,700 --> 01:09:32,166 and he had a headstrong daughter. 1393 01:09:32,200 --> 01:09:36,166 But I've always viewed Almanzo as being a kind of feminist. 1394 01:09:36,200 --> 01:09:38,366 And he certainly emerges that way 1395 01:09:38,400 --> 01:09:40,333 toward the end of "These Happy Golden Years" 1396 01:09:40,366 --> 01:09:42,433 when he woos Laura. 1397 01:09:42,466 --> 01:09:45,133 So I think he gave her the freedom 1398 01:09:45,166 --> 01:09:47,300 to be the woman she needed to be. 1399 01:09:47,333 --> 01:09:53,100 And for the time, that was very unusual and very rare. 1400 01:09:53,133 --> 01:09:58,466 Anderson: After Almanzo Wilder died in 1949, Laura was bereft. 1401 01:09:58,500 --> 01:10:01,400 They had had such a companionable, 1402 01:10:01,433 --> 01:10:03,733 successful marriage. 1403 01:10:03,766 --> 01:10:05,700 Fraser: I think she was quite lonely after that. 1404 01:10:05,733 --> 01:10:10,766 She mentions being lonely in letters. 1405 01:10:10,800 --> 01:10:16,233 Rose came intermittently after Almanzo died. 1406 01:10:16,266 --> 01:10:18,933 Laura's health was... was not great. 1407 01:10:18,966 --> 01:10:21,766 You know, she was pretty frail. 1408 01:10:21,800 --> 01:10:24,100 There were some kids who lived nearby 1409 01:10:24,133 --> 01:10:26,100 who kind of, you know, worked for her. 1410 01:10:26,133 --> 01:10:27,833 [ Laughing ] You know, she would pay them a quarter, 1411 01:10:27,866 --> 01:10:31,766 and they would go fetch the mail for her. 1412 01:10:31,800 --> 01:10:34,233 Anderson: I think she was very gratified 1413 01:10:34,266 --> 01:10:36,866 by the success of the "Little House" books. 1414 01:10:36,900 --> 01:10:39,733 It was probably the culmination 1415 01:10:39,766 --> 01:10:44,800 of her long, hardworking life. 1416 01:10:44,833 --> 01:10:49,166 She loved the fact that she had memorialized her own family, 1417 01:10:49,200 --> 01:10:51,933 preserved her father's stories, 1418 01:10:51,966 --> 01:10:57,266 achieves a degree of financial success. 1419 01:10:57,300 --> 01:11:01,100 She loved the letters that children sent to her. 1420 01:11:01,133 --> 01:11:04,700 And friends that would drop in would remark, 1421 01:11:04,733 --> 01:11:08,033 "I seldom came here to visit Mrs. Wilder 1422 01:11:08,066 --> 01:11:11,900 and didn't find her working on her fan mail." 1423 01:11:11,933 --> 01:11:14,066 Narrator: A few days after her 90th birthday, 1424 01:11:14,100 --> 01:11:19,033 with Rose by her side, Laura dies at home. 1425 01:11:19,066 --> 01:11:24,800 Rose, Wilder's only child, would be her only beneficiary. 1426 01:11:24,833 --> 01:11:27,533 Rose dies in 1968. 1427 01:11:27,566 --> 01:11:30,066 Her 1428 01:11:27,566 --> 01:11:30,066 New York Times 1429 01:11:27,566 --> 01:11:30,066 obituary does not mention 1430 01:11:30,100 --> 01:11:33,866 her famous mother or the "Little House" books. 1431 01:11:33,900 --> 01:11:37,200 Mother and daughter both kept their silence. 1432 01:11:37,233 --> 01:11:39,433 It would not be long before researchers found 1433 01:11:39,466 --> 01:11:42,400 the evidence of the collaboration between them. 1434 01:11:42,433 --> 01:11:44,433 Woodside: It was a shock. It was a total shock. 1435 01:11:44,466 --> 01:11:47,433 Well, that was because the two women were heavily invested 1436 01:11:47,466 --> 01:11:49,366 in keeping that secret. 1437 01:11:49,400 --> 01:11:51,800 Narrator: And though Laura and Rose were gone, 1438 01:11:51,833 --> 01:11:55,466 the "Little House" books were about to take on a new life. 1439 01:11:55,500 --> 01:12:02,866 ♪♪♪ 1440 01:12:02,900 --> 01:12:10,166 ♪♪♪ 1441 01:12:10,200 --> 01:12:12,666 After more than 40 years on bookshelves, 1442 01:12:12,700 --> 01:12:14,466 Laura Ingalls Wilder's characters 1443 01:12:14,500 --> 01:12:16,866 came to life on the small screen. 1444 01:12:16,900 --> 01:12:18,200 Gilbert: I remember my mom telling me 1445 01:12:18,233 --> 01:12:20,466 that they were going to make it into a television series 1446 01:12:20,500 --> 01:12:22,500 and that I was gonna audition for the role of Laura. 1447 01:12:22,533 --> 01:12:25,600 And I remember being incredibly excited about that. 1448 01:12:25,633 --> 01:12:27,666 Laura: "Look at the country girls." 1449 01:12:27,700 --> 01:12:31,533 Made me so mad I wanted to smack her good. 1450 01:12:31,566 --> 01:12:34,800 Narrator: Melissa Gilbert played Laura on the NBC TV series 1451 01:12:34,833 --> 01:12:38,500 "Little House on the Prairie" for nine seasons. 1452 01:12:38,533 --> 01:12:41,266 Gilbert: Loved that book. I loved her character. 1453 01:12:41,300 --> 01:12:43,900 I loved the adventures. 1454 01:12:43,933 --> 01:12:47,333 I think like all young girls who read those books, 1455 01:12:47,366 --> 01:12:50,066 she had me hook, line, and sinker. 1456 01:12:50,100 --> 01:12:52,866 And I wanted to be like her. 1457 01:12:52,900 --> 01:12:55,766 Little did I know, you know, it was not long later 1458 01:12:55,800 --> 01:12:58,933 that I was going to get to play her. 1459 01:12:58,966 --> 01:13:01,266 Laura: I beg you to forgive me for what I did. 1460 01:13:01,300 --> 01:13:04,700 Narrator: Alison Arngrim played mean-girl Nellie Oleson. 1461 01:13:04,733 --> 01:13:06,566 Nellie: You are forgiven. 1462 01:13:06,600 --> 01:13:09,200 Narrator: Dean Butler played Almanzo Wilder. 1463 01:13:09,233 --> 01:13:13,400 Butler: I had no previous knowledge of these books 1464 01:13:13,433 --> 01:13:15,666 or these people before doing the series. 1465 01:13:15,700 --> 01:13:20,900 And now I can say with a... with a great confidence 1466 01:13:20,933 --> 01:13:26,100 and happiness that they are a part of my life forever. 1467 01:13:26,133 --> 01:13:28,466 TV show narrator: The timeless series you grew up with 1468 01:13:28,500 --> 01:13:31,600 comes to life like never before. 1469 01:13:31,633 --> 01:13:33,400 Narrator: The show, watched by millions, 1470 01:13:33,433 --> 01:13:35,400 has never gone off the air. 1471 01:13:35,433 --> 01:13:38,833 It is still in syndication and streaming. 1472 01:13:38,866 --> 01:13:40,766 Friendly: And I think one of the reasons why the television show 1473 01:13:40,800 --> 01:13:44,700 is so popular is they got to live with this family, 1474 01:13:44,733 --> 01:13:49,000 this idealized version of a family, 1475 01:13:49,033 --> 01:13:50,900 for nine seasons. 1476 01:13:50,933 --> 01:13:53,733 Narrator: Trip Friendly's father, producer Ed Friendly, 1477 01:13:53,766 --> 01:13:55,566 turned the books into the TV show, 1478 01:13:55,600 --> 01:13:58,133 and it remains a family business. 1479 01:13:58,166 --> 01:14:01,766 Friendly: So he had an enormous, abiding love for the West 1480 01:14:01,800 --> 01:14:03,800 and for the history of our country 1481 01:14:03,833 --> 01:14:06,333 and the settlers and the pioneers. 1482 01:14:06,366 --> 01:14:08,533 And I think he felt it was great, 1483 01:14:08,566 --> 01:14:10,000 classic American literature 1484 01:14:10,033 --> 01:14:13,566 that should be adapted for television. 1485 01:14:13,600 --> 01:14:15,300 Skurnick: So the TV show, of course, 1486 01:14:15,333 --> 01:14:19,400 as any "Little House" reader will say, it looked wrong. 1487 01:14:19,433 --> 01:14:21,866 You know, that's not their house. 1488 01:14:21,900 --> 01:14:25,833 That's not the sunlight. That's not the coziness. 1489 01:14:25,866 --> 01:14:27,766 That's definitely not Pa! 1490 01:14:27,800 --> 01:14:30,333 ♪♪♪ 1491 01:14:30,366 --> 01:14:34,266 Goldberg: The drama in the books comes from the hardships 1492 01:14:34,300 --> 01:14:35,800 of how they were living, 1493 01:14:35,833 --> 01:14:37,633 where they were living, and when they were living. 1494 01:14:37,666 --> 01:14:40,366 TV has to always add a layer of sentimentality, 1495 01:14:40,400 --> 01:14:42,200 and, you know, there's more humor 1496 01:14:42,233 --> 01:14:43,766 in the television show, I think. 1497 01:14:43,800 --> 01:14:45,333 They made it more for TV. 1498 01:14:45,366 --> 01:14:47,333 They made it more for an audience 1499 01:14:47,366 --> 01:14:51,466 that wanted to see the tropes of family television 1500 01:14:51,500 --> 01:14:55,166 that they were used to seeing but set in the 19th century. 1501 01:14:55,200 --> 01:14:57,500 Gilbert: We also took a lot of dramatic license, 1502 01:14:57,533 --> 01:14:58,533 clearly, with our show. 1503 01:14:58,566 --> 01:15:01,666 We never left Walnut Grove. 1504 01:15:01,700 --> 01:15:05,166 That is not exactly how it went for Laura. 1505 01:15:05,200 --> 01:15:07,933 I think our show was an interpretation 1506 01:15:07,966 --> 01:15:11,133 of what the "Little House" stories were 1507 01:15:11,166 --> 01:15:15,500 applied to that time in America in the 1970s. 1508 01:15:15,533 --> 01:15:18,000 Narrator: The TV show brought legions of new readers 1509 01:15:18,033 --> 01:15:19,966 to the books. 1510 01:15:20,000 --> 01:15:23,733 Butler: I have signed books for the little girl 1511 01:15:23,766 --> 01:15:26,700 who got the book from her mother, 1512 01:15:26,733 --> 01:15:29,166 who got the book from her grandmother. 1513 01:15:29,200 --> 01:15:31,400 Families are sharing these books 1514 01:15:31,433 --> 01:15:33,666 and the "Little House" experience together. 1515 01:15:33,700 --> 01:15:36,900 I think that's one of the beauties of the show. 1516 01:15:36,933 --> 01:15:39,500 Narrator: The renewed interest in all things "Little House" 1517 01:15:39,533 --> 01:15:42,133 included the actual houses. 1518 01:15:42,166 --> 01:15:45,333 Schodorf: And when the pilot TV show came on, 1519 01:15:45,366 --> 01:15:48,300 and it was two hours about Kansas, 1520 01:15:48,333 --> 01:15:51,266 and "Little House on the Prairie," out here 1521 01:15:51,300 --> 01:15:54,433 in the middle of the prairie near Independence, Kansas, 1522 01:15:54,466 --> 01:15:58,433 we started getting streams of cars driving by. 1523 01:15:58,466 --> 01:16:01,933 We've lasted for 45 years. 1524 01:16:01,966 --> 01:16:06,300 Every year, people come from all 50 states 1525 01:16:06,333 --> 01:16:10,066 and 35, 40 countries. 1526 01:16:10,100 --> 01:16:12,333 Stan: After the TV show aired, 1527 01:16:12,366 --> 01:16:15,433 we had thousands of people coming here. 1528 01:16:15,466 --> 01:16:18,233 Because of the crush of people, 1529 01:16:18,266 --> 01:16:22,566 my parents couldn't handle them in the kitchen anymore. 1530 01:16:22,600 --> 01:16:24,200 Narrator: Today, all of the places 1531 01:16:24,233 --> 01:16:26,833 associated with Laura Ingalls Wilder 1532 01:16:26,866 --> 01:16:28,133 are museums... 1533 01:16:28,166 --> 01:16:31,400 out-of-the-way destinations throughout the Midwest... 1534 01:16:31,433 --> 01:16:34,666 for fans looking to connect with the pioneering family 1535 01:16:34,700 --> 01:16:36,300 they feel they know. 1536 01:16:36,333 --> 01:16:38,200 Redman: I love seeing 1537 01:16:38,233 --> 01:16:40,400 how personal some of these items are, 1538 01:16:40,433 --> 01:16:42,933 the connection that people have with them, 1539 01:16:42,966 --> 01:16:45,466 and just how much they care. 1540 01:16:45,500 --> 01:16:48,266 A lot of people really like her library. 1541 01:16:48,300 --> 01:16:50,433 They're very interested in what she read, 1542 01:16:50,466 --> 01:16:53,933 what her literary influences were. 1543 01:16:53,966 --> 01:16:55,933 Pa's fiddle, as well. 1544 01:16:58,800 --> 01:17:02,833 Scrivener: I'm David Scrivener, and I have here Pa's fiddle. 1545 01:17:02,866 --> 01:17:04,600 [ Cheers and applause ] 1546 01:17:04,633 --> 01:17:07,733 [ Fiddle playing ] 1547 01:17:07,766 --> 01:17:14,833 ♪♪♪ 1548 01:17:14,866 --> 01:17:21,966 ♪♪♪ 1549 01:17:22,000 --> 01:17:29,066 ♪♪♪ 1550 01:17:29,100 --> 01:17:31,300 Arngrim: Yeah, if you had told me that 45 years later, 1551 01:17:31,333 --> 01:17:34,400 40 years later, we'd have these events and TV shows 1552 01:17:34,433 --> 01:17:35,733 and go to these sites, 1553 01:17:35,766 --> 01:17:37,833 never in a million, trillion years 1554 01:17:37,866 --> 01:17:40,133 if you told me that I would be talking to people 1555 01:17:40,166 --> 01:17:41,233 from every country on earth 1556 01:17:41,266 --> 01:17:44,300 who would be crying at meeting me 1557 01:17:44,333 --> 01:17:47,966 and the rest of the cast... impossible. 1558 01:17:48,000 --> 01:17:51,833 Narrator: The yearning to know more about the beloved author continued. 1559 01:17:51,866 --> 01:17:55,733 In 1971, "The First Four Years," Wilder's book 1560 01:17:55,766 --> 01:17:59,366 about the early, difficult days of her marriage, was released. 1561 01:17:59,400 --> 01:18:03,566 Its different style and tone raised new questions. 1562 01:18:03,600 --> 01:18:07,800 By that time, Rose's role was already being examined. 1563 01:18:07,833 --> 01:18:12,733 Woodside: The amazing thing about this is that scholars knew 1564 01:18:12,766 --> 01:18:18,366 and were writing about Rose's involvement from the 1970s, 1565 01:18:18,400 --> 01:18:22,300 but people just didn't accept it. 1566 01:18:22,333 --> 01:18:23,433 Narrator: Later in her life, 1567 01:18:23,466 --> 01:18:26,033 Rose became known for her politics. 1568 01:18:26,066 --> 01:18:30,333 Woodside: Rose was sort of a rock star, in today's slang, 1569 01:18:30,366 --> 01:18:32,266 to the Libertarians. 1570 01:18:32,300 --> 01:18:33,433 Narrator: And some passages, 1571 01:18:33,466 --> 01:18:36,166 particularly in the last two "Little House" books, 1572 01:18:36,200 --> 01:18:39,133 suggest her political hand at work. 1573 01:18:39,166 --> 01:18:40,533 Young woman: "She thought... 1574 01:18:40,566 --> 01:18:42,600 Americans won't obey any king on earth. 1575 01:18:42,633 --> 01:18:44,433 Americans are free. 1576 01:18:44,466 --> 01:18:47,666 That means they have to obey their own consciences. 1577 01:18:47,700 --> 01:18:52,500 No king bosses Pa. He has to boss himself." 1578 01:18:52,533 --> 01:18:54,000 Woodside: Many of us, myself included, 1579 01:18:54,033 --> 01:18:56,833 did not realize the political undertones 1580 01:18:56,866 --> 01:19:01,900 to much of the series and did not understand the ways 1581 01:19:01,933 --> 01:19:07,666 in which political messages were put into dramatic scenes. 1582 01:19:07,700 --> 01:19:12,300 I think that, for Laura, it was absolutely not conscious at all. 1583 01:19:12,333 --> 01:19:17,666 I think, for Rose, it was her idea of what is truth. 1584 01:19:17,700 --> 01:19:20,700 So, in that sense, it wasn't conscious, either. 1585 01:19:20,733 --> 01:19:23,333 It was Rose being Rose. 1586 01:19:23,366 --> 01:19:24,533 NARRATOR: "Pioneer Girl," 1587 01:19:24,566 --> 01:19:27,066 Wilder's early attempt to tell her story, 1588 01:19:27,100 --> 01:19:29,300 appeared in 2014, 1589 01:19:29,333 --> 01:19:32,466 84 years after it had been written. 1590 01:19:32,500 --> 01:19:35,466 It quickly became a publishing sensation, 1591 01:19:35,500 --> 01:19:38,500 as Wilder's 19th-century stories climbed 1592 01:19:38,533 --> 01:19:43,100 to the top of 21st-century best-seller lists. 1593 01:19:43,133 --> 01:19:45,200 They resonate to this day. 1594 01:19:45,233 --> 01:19:48,000 ♪♪♪ 1595 01:19:48,033 --> 01:19:49,100 Sarah: The popularity 1596 01:19:49,133 --> 01:19:51,100 is a really interesting phenomenon to me, 1597 01:19:51,133 --> 01:19:55,300 because this is a story of tremendous hardship. 1598 01:19:55,333 --> 01:19:59,433 And yet it makes so many people feel so secure. 1599 01:19:59,466 --> 01:20:03,300 It's emotional comfort food. 1600 01:20:03,333 --> 01:20:05,833 Gay: They were so engaging, 1601 01:20:05,866 --> 01:20:09,200 and they were so beautifully written, 1602 01:20:09,233 --> 01:20:11,266 and they were so charming. 1603 01:20:11,300 --> 01:20:14,600 Like, that I can remember details from those books, 1604 01:20:14,633 --> 01:20:17,166 literally, f... almost 40 years later, 1605 01:20:17,200 --> 01:20:18,366 and I still remember the book 1606 01:20:18,400 --> 01:20:20,800 the first time I read it as clear as day. 1607 01:20:20,833 --> 01:20:24,000 And I can't say that for books I read last week. 1608 01:20:24,033 --> 01:20:29,466 Fraser: She's born just shortly after the end of the Civil War 1609 01:20:29,500 --> 01:20:34,766 and lives until 1957. 1610 01:20:34,800 --> 01:20:40,166 The covered wagon to the atomic bomb is a real stretch. 1611 01:20:40,200 --> 01:20:45,366 And, you know, it's... it's an amazing life, 1612 01:20:45,400 --> 01:20:47,400 not only in... in that sense, 1613 01:20:47,433 --> 01:20:50,633 in the sort of larger sense of what has happened to society, 1614 01:20:50,666 --> 01:20:53,433 but just what she has been able to achieve. 1615 01:20:53,466 --> 01:20:56,500 You know, was born in... in a log cabin 1616 01:20:56,533 --> 01:20:58,966 in the woods in Wisconsin 1617 01:20:59,000 --> 01:21:02,900 and barely is able to, you know, put two cents together 1618 01:21:02,933 --> 01:21:06,933 and dies with an obituary in the New York Times 1619 01:21:06,966 --> 01:21:10,533 celebrating her career as a writer. 1620 01:21:10,566 --> 01:21:16,266 So, it was unimaginable, really, what she was able to accomplish. 1621 01:21:16,300 --> 01:21:19,533 Narrator: Nearly a century after her first book was published, 1622 01:21:19,566 --> 01:21:23,900 Laura Ingalls Wilder's voice is still heard. 1623 01:21:23,933 --> 01:21:26,200 Harper: "Dear Children of Chicago, 1624 01:21:26,233 --> 01:21:31,266 I was born in the little house in the big woods of Wisconsin 1625 01:21:31,300 --> 01:21:34,733 just 80 years ago the 7th of this month, 1626 01:21:34,766 --> 01:21:38,200 and I am calling this my birthday party. 1627 01:21:38,233 --> 01:21:41,400 The 'Little House' books are stories of long ago. 1628 01:21:41,433 --> 01:21:46,466 The way we live and your schools are much different now." 1629 01:21:46,500 --> 01:21:48,866 Teacher: Three or four days the blizzard lasted. 1630 01:21:48,900 --> 01:21:53,000 That's a long time to sit in a cold shanty, isn't it? 1631 01:21:53,033 --> 01:21:55,433 Harper: "But the real things haven't changed. 1632 01:21:55,466 --> 01:21:59,166 It is still best to be honest and truthful, 1633 01:21:59,200 --> 01:22:02,633 to make the most of what we have, 1634 01:22:02,666 --> 01:22:05,600 to be happy with simple pleasures, 1635 01:22:05,633 --> 01:22:09,766 and to be cheerful and have courage when things go wrong. 1636 01:22:09,800 --> 01:22:13,500 With love to you all and best wishes for your happiness, 1637 01:22:13,533 --> 01:22:18,700 I am sincerely your friend, Laura Ingalls Wilder." 1638 01:22:18,733 --> 01:22:23,766 ♪♪♪ 1639 01:22:27,100 --> 01:22:34,866 ♪♪♪ 1640 01:22:34,900 --> 01:22:42,700 ♪♪♪ 1641 01:22:42,733 --> 01:22:50,533 ♪♪♪ 1642 01:22:50,566 --> 01:22:58,433 ♪♪♪ 1643 01:22:59,400 --> 01:23:01,766 ♪♪♪