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Henry O. Quiner Family
Polly Melona Ingalls was born October 14, 1840 in Cuba Township, New York, the fifth child of Lansford Whiting Ingalls and Laura (Colby) Ingalls. The Ingalls family moved to Illinois, then to Jefferson County, Wisconsin. Henry Quiner and Polly Ingalls were married February 15, 1859 in Justice Court in Concord, Wisconsin. They had two children born in Jefferson County: Louisa (b. 1860) and Charles (b. 1862). In 1863, Henry and his brother-in-law Charles Ingalls purchased 160 acres in Pepin County, Wisconsin, the SW 27-24-15. Henry and his family settled on the north half of the quarter section; Charles and Caroline Ingalls settled on the south half. Henry and Polly had five more children: James Albert (b. 1865), Charlotte (b. 1867), George (b. 1871), Lillian (b. 1874), and Ruby (b. 1878). In 1868, Charles Ingalls and Henry Quiner sold their Pepin land and purchased property in Chariton County, Missouri. If the Ingalls and Quiner families settled in Missouri, it wasn't for long. Charles Ingalls' family went on to Indian Territory in Kansas and Henry Quiner's family returned to Wisconsin. November 30, 1869, Henry repurchased his Pepin County land. Laura Ingalls Wilder mentioned Uncle Henry in Little House in the Big Woods (Chapter 1, " Little House in the Big Woods"), saying that Henry came to help Pa with the butchering, and that he had brought Aunt Polly's butcher knife. Uncle Henry and Aunt Polly are next mentioned in Chapter 10 ("Summertime") and in Chapter 11 ("Harvest") as Uncle Henry and Pa trade work. Cousin Charley is the only child of Uncle Henry's mentioned by name in Little House in the Big Woods, although Laura and Mary and "the cousins" stand beside the bed and look at Charley after he is stung by yellow jackets in the field and lies covered with earth and wrapped in strips of cloth. In By the Shores of Silver Lake (Chapter 7, "The West Begins") Uncle Henry and Cousins Charley and Louisa appear again. The cousins are grown and helping to run the boarding shanty at the Big Sioux Railroad Camp. In Chapter 12 ("Wings Over Silver Lake"), Wilder wrote that Uncle Henry and Cousins Charley and Louisa were heading back to the Big Woods to sell their farm and that in the spring of 1880 the whole family was heading to Montana Territory. Actually, the family had sold their Big Woods land in December 1873 and had since been farming in Bergen Township (McLeod County) Minnesota.
Louisa, Albert, and Charlotte Quiner all married and settled in Big Horn County, Wyoming. Louisa married Frank Smith (born c. 1853 in Ohio); they had been married in Minnesota prior to 1875. Albert married Gertrude Price (born c.1866 in Iowa), and Charlotte married Robert Sheldon (born c.1858 in Iowa). In the early 1900s, Carrie Ingalls spent at least a year living in Wyoming with her cousins.
Quiner, family of Henry Odin
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For more information: Anderson, William. The Story of the Ingalls. Davison, Michigan: Anderson Publications, 1967. ---, ed. The Ingalls Family Album. DeSmet: Laura Ingalls Wilder Memorial Society, 1985. Visit the Keystone Historical Museum, 410 Third Street, Keystone, South Dakota 57751. See their website: http://www.keystonechamber.com/kahs/museum.html |
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Copyright © 2009 by Nancy Cleaveland - All Rights Reserved. |
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