Look at that good murderin’ setup these people had. Laura Ingalls Wilder said that she and her family lived right near them:
There was the story of the Bender family that belonged in the third volume, Little House on the Prairie. The Benders lived halfway between it and Independence,Kansas. We stopped there, on our way in to the Little House, while Pa watered the horses and brought us all a drink from the well near the door of the house. I saw Kate Bender standing in the doorway. We did not go in because we could not afford to stop at a tavern.
On his trip to Independence to sell his furs, Pa stopped again for water, but did not go in for the same reason as before.
There were Kate Bender and two men, her brothers, in the family and their tavern was the only place for travelers to stop on the road south from Independence. People disappeared on that road. Leaving Independence and going south they were never heard of again. It was thought they were killed by Indians but no bodies were ever found.
Then it was noticed that the Benders’ garden was always freshly plowed but never planted. People wondered. And then a man came from the east looking for his brother, who was missing.
He made up a party in Independence and they followed the road south, but when they came to the Bender place there was no one there. There were signs of hurried departure and they searched the place.
The front room was divided by a calico curtain against which the dining table stood. On the curtain back of the table were stains about as high as the head of a man when seated. Behind the curtain was a trap door in the floor and beside it lay a heavy hammer.
In the cellar underneath was the body of a man whose head had been crushed by the hammer. It appeared that he had been seated at the table back to the curtain and had been struck from behind it. A grave was partly dug in the garden with a shovel close by. The posse searched the garden and dug up human bones and bodies. One body was that of a little girl who had been buried alive with her murdered parents. The garden was truly a grave-yard kept plowed so it would show no signs. The night of the day the bodies were found a neighbor rode up to our house and talked earnestly with Pa. Pa took his rifle down from its place over the door and said to Ma, “The vigilantes are called out.” Then he saddled a horse and rode away with the neighbor. It was late the next day when he came back and he never told us where he had been. For several years there was more or less a hunt for the Benders and reports that they had been seen here or there. At such times Pa always said in a strange tone of finality, “They will never be found.” They were never found and later I formed my own conclusions why.
That was in a speech she gave in the 30s. By the mid 90s, most historians assumed she was lying, because going by the chronology presented in the books, the Ingalls weren’t in Independence when the Benders disappeared. But then a farmer was digging a cesspool on his property and found a cache of hacked up skeletons – including a fractured skull with an axe wedged inside it. They tested the DNA on the axe and compared it samples from hair in a hair-wreath Rose Wilder had given to her first husband, and there’s something like a 50% chance the axe was Pa’s.
Laura lied about lots of stuff in the book, so who knows. She also added to the Benders story little by little – in 1952, she gave a similar speech in Duluth, but this time she said the reason she had kept it out of the book was that she had been one of the girls buried alive.
NO FUCKING WAY did she say she had been one of the girls buried alive. But what kind of forensics did they have back then, and in that place, that could have determined that the girl was buried alive? –Oh. I guess there could be signs that she had tried to dig her way out.
You tricked me, as usual.
I believe that she was buried alive!