my obsession with a pioneer girl - rants, raves & random bits of laura ingalls wilder research, past and present
FYI
BIG WOODSPepin, Wisconsin
FARMER BOYWilder Homestead
INDIAN TERRITORYWayside, Kansas
PLUM CREEK PREEMPTIONWalnut Grove, Minnesota
THE YEAR IN BURR OAKBurr Oak, Iowa
LIW MEMORIAL SOCIETY De Smet, South Dakota
INGALLS HOMESTEADDe Smet, South Dakota
ROCKY RIDGE FARMMansfield, Missouri
KEYSTONE MUSEUMKeystone, South Dakota
METHODIST CHURCH MUSEUMSpring Valley, Minnesota
POMONA PUBLIC LIBRARYPomona, California
HERBERT HOOVER LIBRARYWest Branch, Iowa
HARPERCOLLINS PUBLISHERSNew York, New York
LHOP, THE MUSICALLittle House Productions LP
©2010 nancy cleaveland
seventhwinter[at]gmail[dot]com
It is best to be honest and truthful, to make the most of what we have, to be happy with simple pleasures and to be cheerful and have courage when things go wrong.
LIW
Making the best of things - a damn poor way of dealing with them. My whole life has been a series of escapes from that quicksand.
RWL
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January 22, 2008
carrie drank, and grace

She turned the handle just a little, and water came out of the spout. She turned the handle back, and the water stopped. Under the cup there was a little hole, put there to carry away any water that spilled. Laura had never seen anything so fascinating. It was all so neat, and so marvelous, that she wanted to fill the cup again and again. But that would waste the water. So after she drank, she only filled the cup part way, in order not to spill it, and she carried it very carefully to Ma. - By the Shores of Silver Lake, Chapter 3, "Riding in the Cars"
Where Laura got the drink of water on the train was called the water alcove. It was a built-in recess in the side of a partition of a passenger car through which passed the faucet of a water cooler, a waste water pipe, and to which a drinking cup holder was attached directly beneath the faucet. The alcove was usually made of metal and had an ornamental guard across the bottom, which mainly served to help keep the cup from falling out of the cup holder when the train was moving. On many trains, the water tank was filled with ice water and insulated with wood. The waste pipe typically carried water onto the tracks below, through a hole in the floor.
Labels: laura ingalls wilder
- posted by pioneergirl at 1:15 AM
