I saw this in the bookshop, and was pleasantly surprised to see it was letters from Laura Ingalls. The cover made it look a little boring, and old, so I passed it up, and then eventually decided to buy it because it would be nice to read about Laura Ingalls and her letters to her husband. The introduction on Laura's letters and the Panama-Pacific International Exhibition were heavy reading, and honestly boring, and I was thinking the whole book would be like that, so I had some reluctance and maybe a little dread going into this, thinking it wouldn't be good.
I liked learning more about Laura, because I grew up watching Little House on the Prairie. I think of her on the show when I think of Laura Ingalls, and don't actually know the real person, so it was hard to compare her older voice with the TV show kid version. I loved the historical terms, and learning what life was like back then.
The introduction was about San Francisco, how it was called "Everybody's Favorite City." Poet George Sterling said "at the end of her streets are stars." Very interesting that the Costanoan Indians called the Pacific Ocean Sundown Sea. In Laura's time the fourth side was mostly the Sutro Forest, which was a big stand of eucalyptus trees planted by schoolchildren.
The author, which was a friend and executor, found recipes, photographs and newspaper clippings, letters and postcards from Laura to Almanzo, which would be the find of the century.
It was funny and relatable how Laura was frugal. The paper she used was cheap and unlined, and wouldn't take ink so she used a pencil.
It's hard to believe Laura died in 1957, which wasn't so long ago, considering she was alive during the prairie days. Rose died in '68, which I also find hard to believe. And Laura married Almanzo in 1885. Laura was called Mama Bess to avoid confusion with Almanzo's sister, Laura. On the show she was Eliza Jane.
I love the line that through these letters we can go back to an era that's veiled to us. To a trans-continental train trip with the pioneer girl who first crossed the plains in a covered wagon, to see her reactions to Henry Ford and Charlie Chaplin.
I loved when she said she would be Manly's eyes like she was for her sister.
I think the first letter I really liked was when she was crossing Great Salt Lake. She writes in a descriptive way that really brings her writing to life, and helps you picture it in your head. I could tell a writer wrote this.
I also liked the parts about Land's End, her seeing the Pacific Ocean, Sutro Estate and its gardens, the Tower of Jewels with its light display that looked like the Northern Lights. It's crazy because it was an old light display, and there's modern ones today, but it sounded like it would be amazing to see that display with the search lights and fireworks even today. I loved hearing of all this through Laura's eyes, and I can imagine how exciting all this would have been, and how modern it was at the time. It was told in a vivid, beautiful way.
I couldn't believe all the exhibits at the Exposition, like the Forbidden Garden, a Navajo Indian Village, and a Samoan Village. There was also an Australian exhibit, the Streets of Cairo, the Palace of Fine Arts, Statue of the Pioneer Mother, and the Court of the Universe. I love the outdoor Greek theater she went to that was made in the style of an ancient Greek amphitheater, and was the only one in existence. I would absolutely love to go to something like that and see a play put on. I never would have guessed it included so many cultures. I would love to go to a fair like this today. It reminded me of a book I read where the characters went to the World's Fair.
She brought everything to life with her descriptions of everything, from the mundane to all the exciting sightseeing she did.
The pictures were a very nice surprise. I didn't expect any, and defintiely not of Rose's house, or Rose herself. I'm glad I got to see Land's End, where the beach ended, and the Cliff House at the beach. I'd love to see how they look today. Rose's house, and the light show.
I'm so glad I got to see the tower of jewels and the spot lights, even if it's black and white.
And the color illumination show and fireworks display. That sounds impressive even today. The Palace of Fine Arts. Statue of the Pioneer Mother. Court of the Universe.
It's funny she's mentioned moving there, and what they will do if they retire there. She's thinking of raising 1500 chickens and maybe they can make Almanzo comfortable in spite of the cold, or let him go south to spend the coldest weather.
Rose had a tea party with some women from work, one who was an artist who drew pictures. She became the renowned Berta Hader, author-illustrator along with her husband on children's books. I was shocked to hear that Rose seemed so well-to-do.
It's so sweet Laura and Rose were working on writing together. They were blocking out a story of the Ozarks. Laura would do the housework so Rose had time to teach her to write when she was done working.
Laura wanted to take a steamer on the way home, saying it would be her only chance to have a trip on the ocean. I bet that was really exciting.
I was hoping her parents were mentioned. At this time her dad had died and her mom was living with Mary in De Smet.
There was an Australia exhibit, with kangaroos and wallabies. She said their front parts are so much smaller than their hind parts that they look ugly and awkward as they hop around. They also had a New Zealand building, with moving pictures of surf bathing,& other things. I wonder if that's what they called surfing. I was shocked when she asked manly do you remember when we talked of going to New Zealand.
There was also a France and Belgium building, and Hawaiian Gardens in the horticultural building.
They would have Hawaiian coffee and pineapple juice and salad and other pineapple dishes and sit and listen to Hawaiian songs. There was a fountain with marble pedestals with canaries in cages and they would sing at certain places in accompaniment to the Hawaiian band.
She says she will tell Manly of the Food Products Building. At the bottom of the page, it was said what she told manly must have been similar to the article she wrote for the Missouri Ruralist which is at the back of the page. It's great she was able to write.
Oct4: u can tell she loved the boat ride, she mentioned it again in a letter. She said the ferry boats aren't as fun because the boats are larger and it rides steadier.
It was interesting she wrote 'private' on one of her letters, about how much rose was getting paid for her writing. It said Laura prob expected Almanzo would read many of her letters aloud to friends in Mansfield.
She says seeing how Rose works the more satisfied she is with raising chickens. 'I intend to try to do some writing that will count, but I would not be driven by the work as she is for anything and I do not see how she can stand it.'
Oct 6: the story was funny how Laura went to visit the artist and left a note and Rose kept calling the house and got no answer. She went home, found the note but didn't hear Laura typing on the typewriter. She runs to the neighbor and then to the grocery store and came back about to call the police. She finally hears the typewriter and finds Laura writing to Almanzo. She said she'd never let her out of her sight.
There was a thick fog for several days and they heard the foghorns calling, which sounded like a lost soul. It was funny when she said nobody ever heard a lost soul calling, but it sounded that way.
Rose did the interview with the Russian violinist. He said the papers and higher ups made up the stories of the barbarities of soldiers on one side treating the wounded on the other side to inflame popular passion and create hatred. He said Germans and Russians treated the wounded as they did their own.
In her letter from August 26, 1915, I love when she describes Great Salt Lake, how the tracks were so narrow you couldn't see them from the window, and it looked like the train was running on water. She watched the moonlight on the water from her berth, and how the lake looked endless, and fell asleep looking at it.
I also liked the description of how the Rocky Mountains looked at sunrise, and how alkali looks like snow, and that and the sand covered them and everything else.
I loved in the August 29 letter there's as astric beside 'as you of course know,'& at the bottom of the page it explains Laura doubtless telegraphed Almanzo.
She talks about Land's End, and seeing the Pacific Ocean, and Sutro Estate. She talks about statues in the forest, an observatory, benches to look over the ramparts, cannons on top, pointed at the sea.
I loved this: 'And just to think, the same water that bathes the shores of china and Japan came clear across the ocean and bathed my feet.'
They saw the coast guard, the life-saving station, and the lifeboat.
And the Gjoa, the ship made in Norway in 1878 and sailed from there to the Northwest Passage to San Francisco.
We had in common not caring for cities, but she found San Francisco beautiful.
Mentions the Tower of Jewels, and seeing search lights that looked like the northern lights.
I found it cute rose and her husband Gilette worked for rival newspapers.
At the Exposition, there was the "Forbidden Garden," which was a replica of a garden near a monastery where women were forbidden to go on pain on death.
There was a statue of the Pioneer Mother, in the Palace of Fine Arts. And also a Navajo Indian village.
There was a Samoan village, and she describes their beautiful golden skin and tattoos and how some of the men were fine-looking. They danced the dance of the headhunters. They have tattoos from their waists to their knees.
I thought it amazing that someone saved the letters, but now I know Laura asked Almonzo to save them so she could tell him more of what she wrote about, and she might use some of the descriptions later.
Sep 13: She mentions a British sailing ship sailing out, and how it might be sink by a German submarine. Because it's the freight ships they really want to get.
A hay boat, she says it looks funny to see hay floating on the water. And a ship from the Hawaiian Islands with a cargo of sugar.
A Greek ship with several strings of flags flying in the wind, which means it will leave soon.
Gillette had a friend who was a lieutenant in the navy and gave Gillette his card with a note saying to show him every courtesy when they go on the battleship. He had the world's record for marksmanship with the big guns on the battleship and was in charge of the reserves at the naval training school on Goat Island.
The Exposition had the Streets Of Cairo.
The newspaper clipping of Sailors at Sea on the Zone, wondering what exhibit they would go on. And it ended up being a boat ride.
She talked of standing with Rose on a steamboat and the mists and spray blowing into their hair and faces. How the boat followed the path of the moonlight. How the lights at the Exposition made it look like fairyland, and the lights of the city on the hills blended with the stars.
They saw the old mission which was the first of San Francisco, Mission Dolores, which was decorated by the Indians in those days.
There were bells connecting the missions and a system of ringing them which would carry the news from point to point so that it would travel all up and down the coast.
It's amazing having Laura's own opinion, how she didn't like Chinese food. And thought Charlie Chaplin was horrid at the picture show.
Almanzo was an accomplished cabinetmaker and carpenter. Some of his creations are in display today at the Wilder home in Mansfield.
It's funny she said they had watched from the 16th century (400 years ago), as if he didn't know. And mentioned beautiful fabrics from France, and after fabrics (cloth of different kinds) like he didn't know what fabrics meant.
There was a painting of the armies of France. A camp at night with a sentinel fire at one side. The rifles were stacked in a long row down the picture, growing smaller in the distance. The flag was rolled and resting across the tops of the rifles nearby and the soldiers lay in their blankets sleeping. Dawn was breaking and on the clouds rode the Phantom Armies of France, she thought all the men and horses who have ever been killed in France's wars.
She asked if Almanzo remembered when they had a notion of going to New Zealand before they went to Florida. I wouldn't have guessed they traveled like that.
She saw pictures of the ugly native islanders that used to be cannibal tribes in Australia and New Zealand.
I couldn't be more shocked that Rose wrote to Almanzo saying Bess was growing fat.
It's amazing rose wrote an article on Henry ford. He told her of a farm tractor he was building.
Laura got a job from the Ruralist to over the Missouri exhibits at the fair.
She talked of rose's interview with engineers. One fired an engine through Dakota north of them during the long winter. At the bottom it said Laura wrote The Long Winter over 20 years later, about her childhood in De Smet, Dakota Territory, which is now South Dakota.
It was cute how she said take care of yourself and inky, and whisper to him that I will be there before long. She told him she wouldn't be writing because she was busy writing for the paper.
I found it depressing that she didn't write him anymore. I wanted to hear the rest of her trip!! Then it went to her article on food. I thought we were promised more articles in the back than what were showed. That was only her article on bread and recipes. I thought we were gonna get rose's article on Henry ford. & more from Laura.
Towards the end, the letters weren't as good, and weren't exciting to read. Some subjects she wrote about weren't that fun to read, and some of the letters were a little long. When she spoke of money and payments, I wasn't interested in reading about it, and was maybe even a little confusing.
The book ended suddenly to me, and it was a little depressing how the letters just cut off. She was writing for the newspaper then about the fair, and told Almanzo she wouldn't be writing him for a while, but I didn't expect the book to end then. I wondered if she sent any more letters to him on the trip, and felt it could have been wrapped up somehow. I wanted to know how long she was in San Francisco, and if she took the boat trip with Rose home like she really wanted to do. She also still had the battleship to go on, and more sightseeing to do, and I really wanted to hear about it.
Some moments in Laura's letters were so sweet, and funny. Here's some quotes that stood out to me:
"Take good care of yourself and Inky and I'll come back before you get to learn how to get on without me."
August 25, 1915. "I wish you were here. Half the fun I lose because I am all the time wishing for you."
"Tell Mr. Nall I said he must keep you and Inky cheered up."
"Mrs. Cooley must have been a sight, and if you don't mind I would rather not dress that way." This sounded funny, although I have no idea what way Mrs. Cooley was dressed, because it was in Almanzo's letter to Laura.
From sep 7, 1915: 'I am so sorry about Inky missing me so much and I am afraid it will only make him feel worse if I send him a letter!'
'I do not want you hurt while I am gone or any other time for that matter.'
From Rose to her dad. 'Tell Inky not to be jealous. We did not see any dogs we liked better than him.' How cute to see that ppl talk about their dogs the same way ppl do today.
'There were some lovely Kentucky race and riding horses, and believe me, they can all have their automobiles that want them. I would have me a Kentucky riding horse if I could afford it.'
'Besides I must leave something to tell you when I come home or you will not be glad to have me.'
Sep23: 'We would have it all to learn and we are rather old dogs to learn new tricks, especially as we do not have to do so.'