Career
She was a younger sister of Laura Ingalls Wilder, who is known for her Little House books As a child, Carrie Ingalls Swanzey (according to Wilder) had been small, thin and frail, and of all the Ingalls family members seemed to have suffered the most through the deprivations of the hard winter of 1880-1881. Wilder remarks in a later book that Carrie "was not recovering from the hard winter as she should" (Little Town on the Prairie, chapter 12).
Swanzey was not constantly ill, but she never enjoyed robust physical health during her life.
She traveled to several places in her young adulthood seeking a more comfortable climate, but always returned to the harsh winter climate of South Dakota. During her late-teen years Swanzey was a typesetter for the De Smet News and, subsequently, other newspapers throughout the state.
Harold was one of the workers who helped carve Mount Rushmore and his name can be found on the granite walls below the monument. He was later killed in a car accident.
David Swanzey died in Keystone, South Dakota on April 9, 1938.
Carrie was enthusiastic about Wilder"s books and helped her by sharing her childhood memories. Like Grace and Laura, she suffered from diabetes. She died of complications from diabetes in Keystone on June 2, 1946, at age 75 and was buried in the De Smet Cemetery.
Laura Ingalls Wilder was the longest-lived Ingalls daughter by far, outliving Mary Ingalls by 29 years, Carrie by 11 years, and Grace Ingalls by 16 years.
Laura Ingalls Wilder eventually also succumbed to diabetes at age 90 on February 10, 1957. Carrie was portrayed in the television adaptations of Little House on the Prairie by:
Twins Lindsay and Sidney Greenbush in the television series Little House on the Prairie and its movie sequels
Haley McCormick in Beyond the Prairie: The True Story of Laura Ingalls Wilder part one movie.