Lately, I’ve been thinking about Samuel Worthen Ingalls. Laura’s great-grandfather.
He interests me because he is the one ancestor Laura never met who makes it into one of her books as a minor character. As I wonder what kind of man he was, Garth Williams’ depiction of him flashes into my mind’s eye. You know the one — he’s leaned back in his chair asleep, his Bible resting open in his lap, while his three errant sons tiptoe out the door to try out their new sled on this forbidden Sunday afternoon.
Yes, that man — Grandpa’s father in the story “Grandpa’s Sled and the Pig” from Little House in the Big Woods — was Samuel Ingalls.
Born in Sandown, New Hampshire, on July 11, 1771, Samuel Ingalls married Margaret Delano in 1793 and moved to Quebec around 1800. Samuel and Margaret had ten children, the youngest being Landsford, Laura’s Grandpa, born in 1812. He returned to the United States shortly afterward, where he served in the War of 1812. He then settled in Cuba, New York, where his grandson Charles (Laura’s Pa) would be born in 1836. Samuel died on February 15, 1841, and is buried at the Maple Lawn Cemetery in Bolivar, New York.
But there’s much more to Samuel than this mere recitation of genealogical facts. You see, in 1809, Samuel Ingalls had a dream. A spiritual vision of future destruction of the wicked.
I think about the man who had this dream… and felt it important enough to write down and spread the message to others. And then I think about the way that this same man enforced a religious upbringing for his family, as told in the story that was passed down to Laura, who recorded it for all of us. A man who had rigid rules for what could and could not be done on a Sunday; a man who invested his time into the study of Scripture; a man who ensured that his children learn the catechisms that would teach them the doctrines of their religion.
And I wonder just how much this dream might have had to do with the strict honoring of Sundays in this family.
But that’s not the only thing about Samuel Ingalls that makes me wonder. You see, when one thinks of the gift for writing that Laura Ingalls Wilder possessed, and especially when one realizes that her daughter, Rose Wilder Lane, had this same gift, it makes one wonder just where this gift came from. One might expect it came from Caroline Quiner Ingalls, the educated refined schoolteacher Laura describes her as. And perhaps it did.
But perhaps the gift came from the Ingalls line. For Laura’s great-grandfather, Samuel Ingalls, wrote more than just his dream. In 1825, he wrote and published a small book, Rhymes of an Unlearned Poet.
So that’s why I’ve been thinking about Samuel Ingalls. Picturing Grandpa’s father in the book… piecing together what bits of information I can find about the man that he was. And wondering… wondering just how much of what made Laura who she was, was handed down to her from her great-grandfather.













While all of this is very interesting, I got most excited reading that he was born in Sandown, NH. This is just a few towns away from where I have lived my entire life. It is just one of those little grasps we all make in some way to connect ourselves to Laura. Those things always make me smile!
What a beautiful (and informative) tribute!
This was very informative. Thank you for sharing. This brings two questions to mind. I’m wondering if the poetry from “Rhymes of an Unlearned Poet” are available for reading anywhere? And is Samuel’s wife, Margaret Delano, related to the Roosevelt family of NY?
I have a copy of the dream. If anyone would like to read a copy, please email beyondlittlehouse @ gmail.com
I do not have a copy of his poetry but am exploring some avenues in an effort to find it. If anyone has any information, please share. Update: I do now have a copy of the poetry but it is not in a form that is sendable. I am working to get it into a format that can be easily shared.
Yes, Margaret Delano’s grandfather and FDR’s great-great-great grandfather were brothers. A fact that I’m sure would not have pleased Laura and Rose, if they were aware of the connection!
Wow. I just read the Dream and I have goosebumps. I see what you mean, I would find it hard not to be as devout as possible after that. What an interesting man.
Thank you for sharing that (and for enlightening me on the ways of the web-I really need all the help I can get!)
I wonder if he passed down this dream to his family. Surely he at least shared it with his children as he was moved to write it for the “world at large.” The only mention I remember off-hand of moral upbringing in the Ingalls family(aside from the aforementioned story involving this man)was when Charles told Caroline that his mother (and later Caroline herself) taught him well the evil of liquor. But he did seem very involved in his religion, so it would seem as he learned it well at an early age and didn’t just “go along” with Caroline’s beliefs without any true conviction.
It does make one pause a moment to realise the influence our forbears- that we’ve never even met- have on us today and what influence we may have on future generations.
Sorry-getting gabby…this is just so fascinating!
I was researching my family on ancestry.com and came apon Samuel Worthen Ingalls. He has so many hits and connections I decided to Google him…I found this site!!!
I can not believe I can be related to the Ingalls. As a girl I was all about Little House!! (I had a crush on Michael Landon…lol) I always wanted to be Laura….have Charles for a Dad..
I have no words. I think I am in shock!! Thank you so much for posting this.!!!!!!
What a wonderful thing to discover, Cassandra!