WALNUT GROVE, Minn. – The burly and bearded mountain man cut an imposing figure as he walked across the prairie in search of the Hollywood stars visiting this small farming town in southwestern Minnesota.
David Lane wore a wool Stetson hat, a red- and black-checkered flannel shirt, and green suspenders he bought a week ago. The 37-year-old computer technician drove 13 hours from the hills of Jackson, Tenn., his Stetson hat on the entire time, all for a chance at meeting cast members of the “Little House on the Prairie” TV show.
The show, a fictionalized TV adaption of the book series by Laura Ingalls Wilder about the life of a pioneer family in the Midwest, continues to draw in fans around the world, even half a century after its premiere in 1974.
Lane is one of an estimated 2,500 fans dressed in bonnets and petticoats this weekend in Walnut Grove, a town normally numbering about 700 souls that has been transformed by the show’s popularity over the past 50 years. He said he wanted to meet actors from the show while dressed like Mr. Edwards, the gruff Tennessee dirt farmer featured in the TV show. “If I go, I gotta go all in,” Lane said of his fashion choices.
Walnut Grove’s celebration for the 50th anniversary this weekend includes a cast reunion of 11 actors from the show, a town festival, church dinners, a fish derby, and a contest for girls ages 8 to 14 who look most like the show’s main character, Laura Ingalls Wilder, and her rival Nellie Oleson.

Many of the cast members, including actors such as Dean Butler and Alison Arngrim, have been to Walnut Grove many times over the years. Asked why she enjoys coming back so much, Arngrim, who played the antagonistic Nellie Oleson, offered a simple response: “The people, obviously! I’m a big hit here,” she said after a meet-and-greet with a long line of adoring fans.
The show continues to make an impact on Walnut Grove, the setting of the show and of the fourth book in the series, “On the Banks of Plum Creek.” The book didn’t mention Walnut Grove by name, but researchers were able to determine that the dugout outside of town was the same site where Wilder and her family lived in the 1870s.
Kris Gordon Klotzbach’s grandparents in 1947 bought the farm that was the site of the Wilder family’s home. For a few decades, some schoolteachers who loved the book would come to the farm to visit, and her grandfather would pick them up in his Pontiac and bring them to the creek, Klotzbach said.