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Rose Wilder Lane (December 5, 1886 – October 30, 1968) was an American writer and daughter of American writer Laura Ingalls Wilder. Along with two other female writers, Ayn Rand and Isabel Paterson , Lane is one of the more influential advocates of the American libertarian movement .
Rose Wilder Lane (niece) Almanzo Wilder (brother-in-law) Grace Pearl Ingalls Dow ( / ˈ ɪ ŋ ɡ əl z ˈ d aʊ / ; May 23, 1877, in Burr Oak, Iowa – November 10, 1941, in Manchester, South Dakota ) was the fifth and last child of Caroline and Charles Ingalls .
Their daughter, Rose Wilder Lane lived until 1968. [12] All three are buried in Mansfield, and many of Wilder's possessions and handiwork can be seen today at Rocky Ridge Farm, as well as the Malone, New York, and Spring Valley, Minnesota, farm sites. The Rocky Ridge Farm is known today as the Laura Ingalls Wilder/Rose Wilder Lane Museum.
Pioneer Girl, fact and fiction of Laura Ingalls Wilder, A to Z. Archived from the original on 2011-10-11. Includes links to obituaries of Little House characters; De Smet Cemetery at Find a Grave; Early 1940s WPA burial listings for De Smet Cemetery at South Dakota GenWeb
The Laura Ingalls Wilder Memorial Society purchased the house in 1967 and opened it to the public the next year. The bodies of Charles, Caroline, Mary, Carrie, and Grace Ingalls, and the unnamed infant son of Laura and Almanzo Wilder and Grace’s husband, Nathan Dow, are buried nearby in the De Smet Cemetery a little over a mile away.
Rose Wilder Lane (niece) Almanzo Wilder (brother-in-law) Caroline Celestia Ingalls Swanzey ( / ˈ ɪ ŋ ɡ əl z ˈ s w ɒ n z i / ING -əəlz SWON -zee ; August 3, 1870 – June 2, 1946) was the third child of Charles and Caroline Ingalls , and was born in Montgomery County, Kansas .
Free Land is a novel by Rose Wilder Lane that features American homesteading during the 1880s in what is now South Dakota. It was published in The Saturday Evening Post as a serial during March and April 1938 [4] and then published as a book by Longmans. [1] [3]
Rose Wilder Lane's book The Discovery of Freedom: Man's Struggle Against Authority was printed in 1943. It received good reviews, notably from Albert Jay Nock, but Lane was dissatisfied with it and would not give permission to reprint it. Only one thousand copies were printed in her lifetime.