No. Mary Amelia Ingalls lost her sight in 1879 when she was 14, possibly as a result of measles or scarlet fever. Still, she was the only one of the Ingalls daughters to receive a diploma of any kind, graduating from a college for the blind in Vinton, Iowa in 1888.
Mary returned home after graduation to live with Ma and Pa. She never married and had no children. Mary sewed as she always had, visited college friends, and taught Sunday school with Ma. Severe headaches plagued her for many years, and at one point she had an operation to help alleviate them.
After Ma's death in 1924, Mary went to the Black Hills of South Dakota to live with her sister Carrie. After having several strokes, she died in 1928 at the age of 63.
Charles and Caroline Ingalls took in three children: Mary, Carrie, and Grace. They were the biological children of Charles and Caroline's family friends who had passed away.
Laura had three sisters, Mary Amelia, Caroline Celestia, and Grace Pearl. She also had a single brother, Charles Frederick.
None. Rose Wilder Lane was the only grandchild of Charles and Caroline Ingalls. Mary never married. Laura's only surviving child was Rose. Neither Carrie nor Grace had children, though Carrie helped raise her husband's children from a prior marriage.
Laura Ingalls has 2 children
Laura Ingalls Wilder has 2 children
Laura Ingalls has 2 children
In the "Little House on the Prairie" TV show, Charles Ingalls did adopt Albert. However, in real life, there is no evidence that the real Charles Ingalls, upon whom the show is based, adopted a boy named Albert.
Caroline B. Cooney had three grown children
she had 2 children
she had 6 children
Charles Darwin has 10 children
Charles bronson has 4 children