I remember that show, I think it was called Frontier House. One family came from an affluent LA suburb and latter moved to Malibu. The man was normal weight to begin with but was worried he was losing too much weight. A doctor came on the show and explained that men were much skinnier back then because they had to do so much physical labor and didn't always have so much available food to replace all those calories. After 90 days all the men had lost 25-30 pounds. |
| So, this begs the question that’s always front and center here. What did the UMC prairie families look like? Did they have a fancy rig? Staub chuck wagon cookware? Designer linen napkins/tablecloths? |
I do think a lot of people in the home school community take the books at face value as historical documents. Prairie fires is a very important supplement for understanding them. The books are amazing but not strictly true. What is true is the portrait of the American spirit. |
The books make it clear that pioneer life was no picnic— remember the family she boards with as a young teacher (young as in 15) and the extremely depressed wife jumps on her husband with a knife in the night, while Laura is feet away? The book does gloss over why Laura has her “jobs” though. |
I think he did have lots of skills— he was musical and, like Laura, highly intelligent. But they weren’t valued in that environment as nd Orin hurt him. Remember when they spent Laura’s hard-earned wages in a parlor organ? Some of Laura’s bitterness and judgement does come out in the last 2 books. What gets me is that she really loved her family for all their flaws, but when the books ended she virtually never saw them again in her life. Maybe once after age 20 because almanzo’s farm failed and they had to move. It feels like the books were a way of keeping close with loved ones otherwise lost. |
No, not at all. The real history of the zingalls family was big in the homeschool community decades before it was even on the radar of the everything about US history is bad crowd discovered it. |
I’m not that poster but am an American history major who also has adhd. (And I’m not young.) I can see the adhd in Pa. I wouldn’t say he was a loser but he was a restless risk taker. Some of those types did quite well in the 19th century but many, many did pretty poorly. The same traits that make him so fun are also what makes him a little bit of a disaster. I don’t think it would be great to be married to him long term. And that is judging him based on the standards off the day. It is crazy when you do 19th century research how many people failed financially multiple times and put themselves back together. Like Victoria Woodhull who had two get rich quick schemes and went broke twice after them. Even Milton Hershey went bankrupt twice before making it big. Without credit rating agencies, you just moved and tried something else. But that doesn’t mean those people were easy to live with! I expect the TV show will gloss over the hardships even more than the books did (as did the 1970s show), so I do wonder if it will give the MaHA trad wife types more fuel for their misguided fire. |
+1. Pa Ingalls was not perfect, but, I don't remember any mention of a drinking problem in prairie fires. |
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I have read a couple of Laura Ingalls Wilder bios. If you love the books (or show), I would definitely read Prairie Fires.
I have tried to rewatch the original show a couple of times. TBH, it is unwatchable. Just one disaster and life lesson after another. Why did 1970s TV suck so bad? |
All of the pioneers were risk takers. They were also people who did not give up and were not afraid of changing course to survive or improve their lives, even if misguided. They failed gloriously and often, yet pivked themselves up and tried again. They were survivors. That doesn't make them ADHD. That makes them tenacious and men and women of their times. There is actually a book called Giants of the Earth written by a Norwegian author, published in Norway and later the US in the late 1920s, that tells a similar historical fiction account of his family's history as pioneers during and around the same time as the Ingalls family. The book is for adults, not children, so it is much more mature in how it approaches the subject matter. But the experiences, fears, attitudes and tenacity are eerily similar to Laura's story, just told from a different experience and different style. If you read any pioneer writings from that time period of westward expansion, including first person diaries and news reports, what Laura wrote was the pioneer experience, simply told through the eyes of a child and written for the ears and eyes of a child. She wasn't making things up, and frankly, not glorifying or creating some mythical fiction. She was recounting real stories about real people and events, reflecting the mindset of the era, and capturing the resilience, insurmountable struggles, ingenuity and incredible accomplishments of a consequential era in US history. The pioneers were a remarkable people, living in a remarkably transitional time, and her writings reflect this. To make the book series something that harps on every fault and flaw on her father to appease modern antipatriarchal audiences, and to focus on her family as runabout shiftless vagabonds, or to highlight tragedies like the loss of a child, would have ruined the book series and created something that would not have stood the test of time. She wrote about her own family experiences. She is allowed to write about the ones she felt worth sharing in the way she wanted to present her own story to the world. The person who is harping on the lazy man child alcoholic Pa does sound young, maybe 20s or early 30s, from the generation where they were taught to throw our intellectual honesty and view all of history through a post 2020 grievance identify lens. |
The Olsens who own the mercantile are such a family. |
| I think PPs are overly harsh on Almanzo who was severely disabled from a bout with diptheria and yet ultimately does make a successful life for his family in Missouri. He also allows his wife to work as a journalist and a bank loan officer and ultimately to publish books (even though during much of her work life, they don't desperately need her income), which was pretty uncommon in those days. They raise a feminist libertarian daughter. I think Almanzo was actually pretty progressive for the time. |
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Some tv be shows and old movies should never be remade and Little House is one in of the them.
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| I'm a guy who used to have a crush on Melissa Gilbert on this show. And before anyone calls me a sicko, she is older than me. |
Maybe Laura needed the money BUT...she was obviously very smart. And, her eventual sister-in-law was also a frontier teacher and even taught Laura (and Laura was a brat to her, which is kind of funny). I have lots of female teachers in my family...so to me this was "The Only White-Collar Job Available to Women of the Prairie"...not a cover-up for the Ingalls' poverty. Google AI says.. "Eliza Jane Wilder, older sister of Almanzo Wilder, taught 13-year-old Laura Ingalls in Dakota Territory during the fall of 1881. Their relationship was notoriously strained. Laura portrayed Eliza Jane as a bossy and ineffective teacher in Little Town on the Prairie, and they frequently clashed. A detailed look at their dynamic and how it was depicted in the books:The Teaching Stint: In the fall following the Hard Winter, Eliza Jane was employed to teach the school term in De Smet, Dakota Territory. Laura Ingalls and her younger sister, Carrie, were among her students. Book vs. Reality: In the Little House on the Prairie series, Eliza Jane is depicted as a strict, slightly shallow, and somewhat incompetent teacher who struggled to maintain order. In reality, while Laura did find her difficult, Eliza Jane was a highly educated and fiercely independent woman who successfully filed and operated a homestead claim. Later Relationship: Despite their intense clashes during Laura's youth, the two women eventually reconciled somewhat as they grew older. When Laura and Almanzo's daughter, Rose Wilder Lane, was seeking better high school opportunities, they allowed her to live with Eliza Jane in Crowley, Louisiana. Eliza Jane served as a significant mentor to Rose, who admired her aunt's independence and forward-thinking views." |