Hemingway's 1923 Passport photo |
Though the list of his much romanticized residences reads like
a Jim Varney filmography (Ernest Goes to Spain; Ernest Goes to Paris; Ernest
Goes to Cuba; Ernest Goes to... you get the point), the fact remains that Hemingway
is a Chicago-area writer. Born on July 21st , 1899, to Dr. Clarence
Hemmingway and Grace Hall-Hemingway, The young Ernest’s literally career could be
argued began in Oak Park River Forest High School where he wrote for the school
paper, The Trapeze. Yet it was his
family vacations to their cabin in upstate Michigan, near the town of Petosky,
that had lasting impressions on the young Hemingway, making a bulging cameo in
his first collection of published short stories, In Our Time, where Chicago and Oak Park are practically left out in
the cold.
However one shining sliver of acknowledgement appears at the
end of his short story “A Very Short Story”, which revolves around the
unfulfilled love of a young Italian nurse and an unnamed military officer she
met as a patient.
“The major did not marry her in the spring, or any other time. Luz never got an answer to the letter to Chicago about it. A short time after he contracted gonorrhea from a sales girl in a loop department store while riding in a taxicab through Lincoln Park.”
CTA Loop |
It’s a subtle reference, but it’ll have to do. Now Chicagoans
will nod in recognition at the mention of the “loop”, or where Lincoln Park is
located in Chicago’s geography. But to the uninitiated here’s a little primer:
the Loop is the central node where all the lines of the CTA(Chicago Transit
Authority) meet then circle above the streets
and through business district’s skyscrapers before shooting back out to their
respective neighborhoods. This area is named thus because of the literal loop
the El (Elevated Train) creates through downtown.
Arial View of Lincoln Park |
Next, Lincoln Park is a neighborhood located north of
downtown Chicago. An affluent neighborhood, it’s home to DePaul University and the
Lincoln Park Zoo.
Me at Hemingway's birthplace |
Though his descriptions of exotic places around the world
whet the imaginary appetite much more than this passage, Hemingway found little
need to consistently use Chicago as the primary backdrop of his fiction, unlike
other writers we’ll discuss later. Yet the residence located at 339 N. Oak Park
Ave, Oak Park Illinois holds the singular distinction of being the birthplace
of one of the most beloved writers in history.
Note: If you discover other moments where Chicago appears in
Hemingway’s writings, post a comment.
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