Before the covered wagons rolled westward, before the lanterns were lit in sod cabins and surveyors' houses, there was a girl named Caroline.
Born in the Wisconsin Territory to a widowed mother and raised on quiet strength and unspoken resilience, Caroline Quiner came of age in the margins of American history; teaching schoolchildren by lamplight, folding linen with precision, and building a life shaped by duty, faith, and grace.
This richly detailed biography traces her journey from the forests of Brookfield to the open prairies of Dakota Territory, following the real woman behind one of literature's most beloved maternal figures.
Wife to Charles Ingalls. Mother of five, including a daughter who would write her into legend.
The beating heart of a family that weathered blizzards, loss, and change without ever losing its center. This is semi-fictional the story of a woman who didn't seek recognition; but became an icon of the American frontier.
Quiet. Steady. Enduring. She was always more than "Ma."