February 12, 2013

The Sears Mitchell Owned by Laura Ingalls Wilder

A famous house is the "Sears Mitchell" that Laura Ingalls Wilder lived in from 1928-1936.

Laura Ingalls Wilder's "Rock House" in Mansfield, Missouri. Photo courtesy of the Missouri Division of Tourism.

                   



Technically it is not a Sears kit home; however, it was inspired by the Sears Mitchell.

Rose Wilder Lane, Laura's daughter, built the ersatz Mitchell for Laura and her husband Almanzo in 1928. Rose had become a successful writer and wanted to give a new house to her parents as a Christmas gift. Rose loved the house from the Sears Modern Homes catalog but had her Mitchell built using local materials, not pre-cut materials delivered from Sears. Rose wanted stones on the exterior and not wood shingles. The Mitchell was customized on the interior as well and it cost over $11,000 to build.

The house was built on the 180-acre Wilder property outside Mansfield, Missouri. Rose moved into her parents' old farmhouse and Laura and Almanzo moved into what the family called the "Rock House".


Laura, Almanzo, and Nero in front of the Rock House. Photo courtesy of wendymcclure.net.


In the Rock House, Laura hand wrote the first four books in the Little House series: Little House in the Big WoodsLittle House on the PrairieOn the Banks of Plum Creek, and By the Shores of Silver Lake.

In 1936, Rose moved to Connecticut and the Wilders moved back into the old farmhouse. They told Rose they were homesick. The Wilders sold the Rock House and the adjoining 40 acres to a neighbor. They lived in the farmhouse until their deaths (Laura died in 1957 at the age of 93).

Today, the Laura Ingalls Wilder Home Association owns the Rock House. The house was restored in the 1990's. The house has four bedrooms, two bathrooms, a living room and a dining room. The floors are pecan wood. The Rock House is open for tours, but no interior photos are allowed.



15 comments:

Anonymous said...

I have been through the "rock house" and saw only two bedrooms and one bathroom.
There is an upstairs or attic which was not part of the tour.
It was a very nice house and no doubt very modern for the time.

Mavis Harris said...

I lived on that property in 1976. There was a small house I rented that was in between the Wilder home and the rock house. We rented the rock house from some people living in the rock house. I use to go over to the rock house and visit my landlords. Had I known that the house used to belong to the Wilder's at the time I would have paid closer attention. I love history. I never knew the house had been in their family until many years later!

Unknown said...

I don't get it. Except for the rock, it looks exactly like the Sears catalog house with Sears materials- like the modern "patio doors." Why did the Sears house cost only $1953.00, but Rose spent $11,000 in 1928? That was a TON of money of money, and I read she pretty much lost ALL of her money, and a lot of her parents' money the following year in the Stock Market Crash. Reading books on Rose and Laura, it seems like Rose kicked her parents out of their farm house that Alamanzo built and Rose gave them this rock house, and they weren't very thrilled with it. As soon as Rose moved out of their white farm house, they moved back in.

Sears Homes of Chicagoland said...

A Mitchell typically cost about $5,000 to $6,000 all inclusive, based on the mortgage amounts we've seen. I'm not sure where the $11,000 figure comes from, but it's possible depending on the cost of the wood used.

Unknown said...

I live in the Mitchell. Looked just like the catalogue image when I bougt it. It had the bench and shutters to boot. The roof design isn't very practical for Wisconsin weather since the snow builds up behind the chimney. I ended up having a ceiling collapse... then had a roofing company come and reconfigure the space behind the chimney to avoid future leaks. I love my house??

Sears Homes of Chicagoland said...

You had the bench?! I've never seen one of those, and they were sold with several of the Sears models.

Rebecca, if you want to email me your address, I can add your house to the national database. lara@sears-homes.com

Anonymous said...

Part of the cost of building the rock house was running the electric lines out to that property from town. No one out there had city utilities until then....

DekeB said...

My family lives in a 1928 Sears Mitchell in Flint,Michigan - we love it!

Unknown said...

Just bought the 1936 Mitchell in Tennessee. I'm hoping to do a full history of this house. I'm in an older city with small population and it seems everyone knows this house! Lara, I see your work email noted above, I will send a note there. Merry Christmas to all!

Sears Homes of Chicagoland said...

HI, we don't have a Mitchell in TN listed on our database. You can email me your address to lara@sears-homes.com. Happy Holidays to you!

Unknown said...

How can I learn more about the Sears Homes of Chicagoland and other Sears styled homez including the floor plan for the Mitchell? I am fascinated by this architectural stle! style

Sears Homes of Chicagoland said...

There is more information about the Mitchell here:

http://www.sears-homes.com/2012/06/authenticated-sears-mitchell.html

Unknown said...

I know where some Sears houses are in Schuyler, Virginia. I even have one of the first Sears catalogs.

Unknown said...

I read several books about Rose Wilder Lane, and this story here makes no sense. That Wilder house is EXACTLY the Mitchell SEARS house except for the exterior stone work. So could you buy the blue prints from Sears without using/paying for their materials? And $11,000 for that tiny house in 1928 is absolutely insane when it was $2,000 from Sears! $11K is like $1 million+ in 2021 money. Supposedly Lane/Wilder house had electricity and running hot water which was super rare for that area, and mega expensive. Rose is described as bi-polar and very erratic with her money in books about her. There were also stories that Rose was having sex as a 17-year-old with her male High School teacher/tutor in Louisiana while staying with Almanzo's sister to further her education. Later there were rumors that Rose was a lesbian which is why she divorced her husband around 1915-1918, and took up with lesbian author Helen Dore Boylston at the Wilder farm house! Laura and Almanzo probably figured it out. Rose cut her hair extremely short like a boy, even by 1920s flapper standards. Laura and Almanzo also did NOT want this house, and they should have told Rose to move into it herself! Almanzo custom built the white farmhouse, including the kitchen for their use as Laura was only 4'11" and Almanzo was only 5'3". Supposedly Carrie Ingalls was a shocking 4'8"! Obviously very poor nutrition/starvation on the Kansas and South Dakota plains back then.

WVUDrummergirl said...

I'm reading the book "Prairie Fires: The American Dreams of Laura Ingalls Wilder" by Caroline Fraser. It explains the reasons behind the $11,000 spent. Apparently, Rose repeatedly made changes such as ripping out a ceiling and having it lowered, refinishing the new floors to her specs, and altering the original bathroom's design. She even accepted a $2500 loan from her parents to complete the house. The original "Mitchell" design practically became a "Lane." She made no effort to stick to a budget.

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