Hemingway Chronology
1899 Ernest Miller Hemingway is born in Oak Park, Illinois, the second child of Dr. Clarence E. Hemingway (Ed) and Grace Hall Hemingway
1900 EH goes with family to their summer cottage in northern Michigan
1899/
1902 EH dressed in girl’s clothes as Marcelline’s twin
1905 EH enters first grade with year-older sister Marcelline
1917 EH graduates from Oak Park High School in June; takes a job as a cub reporter for the Kansas City Star in October
1918 in May EH sails to Europe to assume duties as a Red Cross ambulance driver in Italy; is badly wounded in Fossalto on July 8 while distributing chocolate and cigarettes to troops; meets and falls in love with nurse Agnes Von Kurosky while recuperating in Milan
1919 EH returns to US; receives a “Dear John” letter from Agnes, saying he is too young
1920 EH quarrels with his mother, who banishes him from Windemere (family vacation house in Northern Michigan) shortly after his 21st birthday
1921 EH marries Hadley Richardson on September 3; provided with letters of introduction from Sherwood Anderson, the newlyweds leave for Paris after Thanksgiving, where EH writes dispatches for the Toronto Star and begins to write seriously
1922 EH meets expatriates Ezra Pound and Gertrude Stein; in December Hadley takes a train to Lausanne and en route loses a suitcase (stolen) containing the manuscripts to all of EH’s unpublished fiction
1923 EH goes to Spain for bullfights in Pamplona; briefly returns to Toronto for birth of his son, John Hadley (Bumby) in October; publishes Three Stories and Ten Poems in limited edition
1924 EH assists Ford Maddox Ford in editing transatlantic review, which prints “Indian Camp”; brings out slim in our time volume
1925 EH publishes In Our Time, containing several stories in northern Michigan depicting maturation of Nick Adams; in May meets and befriends F. Scott Fitzgerald
1926 Fitzgerald sends EH to Scribner’s and editor Maxwell Perkins, and the two (writer and editor) begin a life-long association, beginning with The Torrents of Spring (satiric attack on Sherwood Anderson and other writers) and The Sun Also Rises, one of his most famous novels
1927 EH publishes Men Without Women, a story collection that includes “Hills like White Elephants” and “The Killers”; is divorced by Hadley and marries Pauline Pfeiffer
1928 EH leaves Paris and moves to Key West; son Patrick is born; Dr. Hemingway kills himself with a .32 revolver
1929 EH publishes A Farewell to Arms in September; receives good reviews and sales, despite Boston censorship of serialized version in Scribner’s Magazine
1930 EH breaks arm in auto accident
1931 Son Gregory Hancock is born
1932 EH publishes Death in the Afternoon (non-fiction bullfighting book)
1933 EH publishes Winner Take Nothing, a book of stories that includes “A Clean, Well-Lighted Place”; goes to Africa for a safari, the setting for his two famous stories, “The Snows of Kilimanjaro” and “The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber” (both published in 1936)
1934 EH publishes The Green Hills of Africa (big-game hunting and safaris)
1937 EH serves as a war correspondent during the Spanish Civil War; contributes funds
to Loyalist cause; publishes To Have and To Have Not, his most overtly political novel
1938 EH publishes The Fifth Column and the First Forty-nine Stories, comprising a play about the war in Spain and his stories to date
1939 EH separates from Pauline; moves to Finca Vigia, a house near Havana
1940 EH marries Martha Gelhorn; publishes For Whom the Bell Tolls, his best-selling
novel about the Spanish Civil War
1942 EH outfits his boat Pilar to hunt German U-Boats in the Caribbean (no encounters)
1944 As a war correspondent, EH observes D-Day and attaches himself to the 22nd Regiment, 4th Infantry for operations leading to the liberation of Paris; begins relationship with news reporter Mary Walsh
1945 EH is divorced by Martha in December
1946 EH marries Mary in March; they live in Cuba and in Ketchum, Idaho
1950 EH publishes Across the River and into the Trees, a novel about a December-May relationship savagely attacked by critics
1951 EH publishes The Old Man and the Sea, novella about the trials of Santiago, an old
Cuban fisherman; novella was published in its entirety in Life
1952 EH returns to Africa for safari with Mary; wins Pulitzer Prize
1953 In January, EH is severely injured in two separate plane crashes and is reported dead
erroneously in several accounts; awarded the Nobel Prize
1959 EH in declining health but observes bullfights in Spain for his 60th birthday
1960 EH undergoes shock treatment for depression; on July 2 EH kills himself with a
shotgun at his Ketchum home
1964 A Moveable Feat is published posthumously, a memoir of his early years in Paris
1970 Islands in the Stream is published, a semi-autobiographical novel
1972 The Nick Adams Stories is published (includes previously unpublished stories)
1981 Ernest Hemingway: Selected Letters is published
1985 The Dangerous Summer is published (bullfighting); Dateline Toronto: The Complete Toronto Star Dispatches is published
1986 The Garden of Eden, a substantially cut and rearranged version of a manuscript is published; the story recounts the love affairs of two women and one man, which causes many EH critics to revise opinions about EH’s macho image
1987 The Complete Short Stories is published
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