The Ingalls Family — 1880, the Real ‘Little House’
Summary
In the autumn of 1879 a Wisconsin-born carpenter and farmer named Charles Ingalls brought his wife Caroline and their daughters to a raw stretch of Dakota Territory beside a slough and a little body of water called Silver Lake. He had taken a job with the railroad that was pushing west across the prairie, and he meant to do what tens of thousands of others were doing in that decade — file a homestead claim, hold it five years, and turn 160 acres of unbroken grass into a farm of his own. The town that grew up where the rails reached would be called De Smet, and the family that wintered there would become, decades later, the most famous homesteaders in American memory.
The Ingalls were not famous yet. They were one ordinary, often-failing pioneer family among thousands, and their Dakota years were marked less by triumph than by hardship survived: a notorious winter of unbroken blizzards in 1880–1881 that cut the new town off from supply trains for months and nearly starved it; drought and crop loss; debt; and the constant grind of proving up a claim on land that fought back. What sets their story apart is that the second-youngest daughter, Laura, grew up to write it down. In the "Little House" books — most directly By the Shores of Silver Lake, The Long Winter, Little Town on the Prairie, and These Happy Golden Years — Laura Ingalls Wilder turned her family's De Smet homestead into the central, enduring document of the American homesteading experience.
Because Wilder wrote fiction grounded in memory, De Smet is the rare homestead whose private interior — the cold, the hunger, the fear, the small joys — was recorded by someone who lived it as a child and then composed it as an old woman. The books soften and shape, but the spine of them is true: Charles Ingalls really filed on a quarter-section near Silver Lake; the family really endured the Hard Winter; the town of De Smet really rose from the prairie as the railroad arrived. Land office records, the town's own history, and the historic homestead site corroborate the family's presence and their claim.
The Ingalls story is, in miniature, the whole Dakota homestead boom: a railroad pushing west, a flood of claimants following the rails, a town conjured in a single season, a brutal first winter that tested whether anyone could stay, and the long five-year struggle to convert a filing into a patent and a patent into a home. The family stayed. Charles Ingalls proved up, gave up the failing-farm life for a steady living in town, and died in De Smet; the daughters married and the books made the place immortal.
Timeline
The Claim
Charles Ingalls had been chasing better land for most of his adult life — Wisconsin, Kansas, Minnesota, Iowa — moving on whenever crops failed, money ran out, or the next horizon looked greener. By 1879 he was in Minnesota when he took work as a timekeeper, bookkeeper, and storekeeper for a railroad contractor extending the line into Dakota Territory. That job carried the family west to the end of the tracks, to a railroad camp beside Silver Lake, in the autumn of 1879. They wintered there in the abandoned surveyors' house, alone on the empty prairie after the construction crews pulled out — the long, isolated season Laura later wrote into By the Shores of Silver Lake.
The draw was the same that pulled the whole "Great Dakota Boom" of 1878–1887: free land under the Homestead Act, made suddenly reachable by the advancing railroad. Where the rails went, towns and claimants followed within months, and Charles Ingalls was positioned ahead of the rush. On February 19, 1880 he filed a homestead claim at the land office in Brookings — the northeast quarter of Section 3, just southeast of the new townsite — securing about 157 acres of unbroken prairie for sixteen dollars in fees and the standard promise: live on it, improve it, and prove up after five years.
The family was poor, and the move was a gamble like all the others before it — except this time Charles Ingalls did not move on. As the railroad reached Silver Lake, surveyors platted a town, and in the spring of 1880 De Smet was born almost overnight, named for the Jesuit missionary Pierre-Jean De Smet. Charles built one of the first stores on the new Main Street and the family had a foot in both worlds: a town building and a homestead claim out on the prairie. They had arrived at exactly the moment a town comes into being from nothing — and just in time for the worst winter anyone there would ever see.
Building In
On the claim, the Ingalls built the kind of shelter the treeless country allowed and improved it as they could — a claim shanty to satisfy the residence requirement, with the constant labor of breaking sod to put land under the plow. Plains homesteading meant cutting the matted prairie turf with a breaking plow, a few acres at a time, and coaxing the first crops out of ground that had never grown anything but grass. It was slow, and every season the family was racing the calendar of the Homestead Act and the calendar of the weather at once.
The first true Dakota winter is the one history remembers. The winter of 1880–1881 — the "Hard Winter" — descended in October 1880 with a blizzard and did not let go until spring. Storm followed storm with barely a clear day between them, burying the new town under snow so deep and so relentless that the railroad could not keep the line open. By midwinter the trains stopped entirely; De Smet was cut off, and the few hundred people in town faced running out of food, fuel, and coal with months of winter still to come. Laura's The Long Winter records the family burning twisted hay for warmth when the coal gave out and grinding seed wheat in a coffee mill to make bread when the flour was gone.
What saved the town, in the books and in the local record, was a desperate errand: two young men — Almanzo Wilder, who would later marry Laura, and Cap Garland — drove a sleigh out across the open prairie between storms to find a homesteader rumored to be holding a crop of wheat, bought it, and hauled it back to feed De Smet through the worst of the winter. The trains did not get through until May 1881. The Hard Winter became the dividing line in the town's memory and in the Ingalls family's Dakota years — the season that decided who could endure the country and who could not. The Ingalls endured it, all of them, and went back out to the claim when spring finally came.
Proving Up
Proving up took the Ingalls the full span of the early 1880s, and those years carried the ordinary punishment of Dakota homesteading: hot, dry summers, uncertain harvests, debt against the next crop, and the isolation of a quarter-section miles from anywhere. Charles Ingalls farmed the claim through these seasons while also working in town to keep cash coming in, the dual life of so many homesteaders who could not make the land pay on its own. The five-year residence-and-improvement requirement was a marathon run against drought, grasshopper years on the plains, and the simple difficulty of making a living from raw prairie.
The daughters' lives carried the strain too. The eldest, Mary, had been blinded by illness before the family reached Dakota, and the books record Laura teaching school as a teenager — boarding miserably with a hostile family in a claim shanty during another bitter winter — partly to help pay for Mary's schooling at the college for the blind. Money was always short; the farm never became the prosperous enterprise the homestead dream promised. Crop failures and the costs of a blind daughter and a growing town kept the family near the edge for years, exactly the squeeze that drove so many homesteaders to give up before the patent came through.
But Charles Ingalls did prove up. He filed his final proof papers in 1886 and was granted the patent — title to the homestead — on December 20, 1888, converting eight years on the claim into legal ownership of the land. Unlike most of his earlier moves, this one held: rather than chasing the horizon again, he sold the farm in 1892 and settled the family permanently into the house he built in town on Third Street, taking on town work to make a steady living. The restless westering that had defined Charles Ingalls's whole life finally stopped on the Dakota prairie. De Smet was where he stayed, and where, in 1902, he died.
What’s There Now
De Smet endured and grew into the small county-seat town it remains today in Kingsbury County, South Dakota, and it has long called itself the "Little Town on the Prairie" after the book Laura set there. Charles Ingalls proved up his claim, gave up the failing-farm life for steady town work, and lived out his days in De Smet; he and Caroline, along with daughters Mary, Carrie, and Grace, are buried in the De Smet cemetery. The restless family that had moved a half-dozen times finally came to rest on the Dakota prairie.
The homestead claim southeast of town is preserved today as the Ingalls Homestead, a living-history site on the original quarter-section where visitors can see a reconstructed claim shanty, dugout, and sod buildings and try the chores of homestead life. In town, the Laura Ingalls Wilder Memorial Society maintains the Surveyors' House — the very building the family wintered in beside Silver Lake — and the house Charles Ingalls later built in De Smet, both open as museums. The town runs an annual outdoor pageant dramatizing the books and the Hard Winter.
More than the buildings, the legacy is the books themselves, which made De Smet a place of pilgrimage and turned the Ingalls family's perfectly ordinary homestead struggle into the story through which generations of readers understand the whole movement. The cold of The Long Winter, the breaking of the sod, the gamble of the claim, the five-year wait for the patent — Wilder fixed all of it in memory. The real prairie is still there outside De Smet, planted now in crops the Ingalls would have envied, and the cottonwoods Charles Ingalls is said to have set out for his daughters still mark where the claim shanty stood.
Lessons
- The railroad created the town and the rush; arriving ahead of the rails was the difference between a good claim and none.
- One catastrophic winter could decide whether a brand-new town survived its first year at all.
- Most homesteaders, even the famous ones, could not live off the raw land alone and survived only by also working in town.
- Proving up was a five-year endurance test against drought, debt, and weather, not a single heroic act.
- An ordinary family's story became the nation's frontier memory only because one of them lived to write it down.
References
- De Smet, South Dakota Wikipedia
- Charles Ingalls Wikipedia
- The Long Winter (novel) Wikipedia
- Laura Ingalls Wilder Memorial Society — De Smet Laura Ingalls Wilder Memorial Society