Almanzo James Wilder (February 13, 1857 - October 23, 1949) was the husband of Laura Ingalls Wilder and father of Rose Wilder Lane, both noted authors. He was born the fifth child of successful farmers James and Angeline Day Wilder on their farm near Malone, New York on February 13, 1857. As part of her "Little House" series of autobiographical novels, Laura Ingalls Wilder wrote a book titled Farmer Boy about Almanzo's childhood in upstate New York.
Almanzo is a well-known character in the "Little House" books, and Laura writes about him, their relationship, and subsequent marriage in Little Town on the Prairie, The Long Winter, These Happy Golden Years, and The First Four Years. Almanzo was characterized as a quietly courageous, hardworking man who loved horses and farming. He was also an accomplished carpenter and woodworker.
Laura wrote of Almanzo's admirable character in The Long Winter, a book based on the hard winter that De Smet suffered in the early 1880's. The story tells how Almanzo and fellow townsman Cap Garland saved the town (including Laura's family) from starvation by making a risky journey over 20 miles through life-threatening blizzards to bring the town a load of wheat that provided food until supply trains arrived in the spring.
During their first years of marriage, described in The First Four Years, the Wilders were plagued by bad weather, illness, large debts and other hardships. In spring of 1888, when Rose was still a baby, Almanzo and Laura suffered from diphtheria. Almanzo resumed work too soon, however, and suffered a relapse, causing an apparent stroke that left him partially paralyzed. Although he recovered from the paralysis, his legs and feet were permanently weakened, resulting in his needing a cane to walk. Almanzo's inability to perform the hard physical labor associated with wheat farming in South Dakota, combined with a lengthy drought in the late 1880s-early 1890s, further contributed to the Wilders' downward spiral into debt and poverty.
The year 1889 proved to be the breaking point for the Wilders. In early August, Laura gave birth to a son, who died after only a few days. That same month Laura and Almanzo lost their home to a fire and their crops to drought. In the words of Almanzo's daughter, Rose, "It took seven successive years of complete crop failure, with work, weather and sickness that wrecked his health permanently, and interest rates of 36 per cent on money borrowed to buy food, to dislodge us from that land."
Rocky Ridge Farm was eventually expanded to about 200 acres (809,000 m²), and was a productive poultry, dairy and fruit farm. Almanzo's lifetime love of the Morgan breed of horses was indulged, and he also kept a large herd of cows and goats. Having learned a hard lesson by focusing on wheat farming in South Dakota, the Wilder's chose a more diversified approach to farming suited to the climate of the Ozarks. Almanzo lived out the rest of his life on his farm, and both he and Laura were active in various community and church pursuits during their time in Missouri.
In the 1920s and 1930s, Rose lived on the farm for long periods of time, bringing electricity and other modern updates to the place, even building an English-style stone cottage for her parents, while taking over the farm house herself for about 10 years. Almanzo learned to drive an automobile, which greatly improved the Wilder's mobility. They eventually took several long auto trips, including to California and the Pacific Northwest, and went several times to visit Laura's remaining family in South Dakota. When Rose moved permanently to Connecticut in about 1937, her parents quickly returned to their beloved farm house, later selling off the eastern land with the stone cottage.
Almanzo spent his last years happily tending small vegetable and flower gardens, indulging his lifetime love of woodworking and carpentry and tending his goats. He also aided his wife in greeting the carloads of Little House fans who regularly found their way to Rocky Ridge Farm. Almanzo Wilder died at the age of 92 on October 23, 1949 after suffering two heart attacks. Laura died eight years later, on February 10, 1957. Rose lived until 1968. All three of them are buried in Mansfield, and many of Almanzo's possessions and handiwork can be seen at Rocky Ridge Farm, now the Laura Ingalls Wilder/Rose Wilder Lane Museum, as well as the Malone, NY and Spring Valley, MN sites.
Almanzo Wilder appears to have been a quiet, stoic man - representative of the time and culture in which he lived. His love of farming, horses and rural living are well documented. Most of what is known of his personality and inner character must be gleaned from his wife's and daughter's literary portrayals (the lead character of Rose's homesteading novel Free Land was based on Almanzo) and the remaining evidence left among his family and friends' written recollections.
1857 births | 1949 deaths | People from New York | Wilder family
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Almanzo Wilder".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world