History – bishopshallusa.com http://www.bishopshallusa.com/ Guide to Oakland Fri, 12 Nov 2021 10:16:56 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.7.4 Hemingway and his Oak Park roots https://www.bishopshallusa.com/2021/09/06/oak-park-hemingway/ Mon, 06 Sep 2021 14:43:04 +0000 https://www.bishopshallusa.com/?p=14 In Oak Park, Illinois, Ernest Hemingway’s life and work are laid out. His early 20 years in this Chicago suburb, surrounded by prairies and woodlands, groomed him for a life as a writer. Hemingway’s father encouraged him to like the

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In Oak Park, Illinois, Ernest Hemingway’s life and work are laid out. His early 20 years in this Chicago suburb, surrounded by prairies and woodlands, groomed him for a life as a writer. Hemingway’s father encouraged him to like the outdoors and to pay great attention to nature. His mother took him to Chicago opera halls and museums so he could understand the inner life that the arts kindled. Hemingway sang in the choir and meditated on sermons at the church.

Hemingway obtained his only proper schooling at Oak Park. Ernest watched what was going on around him and within him in school in order to make his novels come to life for his readers. He wrote most eloquently about people, places, and events he had direct knowledge of. When Ernest moved from Oak Park, he continued to write about his travels across four continents, attempting to portray to readers what it was like. His writing focused on universal issues in people’s lives.

He received the Nobel Prize in 1954 for “The Old Man and the Sea,” a novella that exemplifies his powerful, style-making command of the art of contemporary narrative.  People throughout the world recall Hemingway’s exploits decades after his death in 1961, and younger generations of readers find new meaning in his work.

TIMELINE

1899

Ernest Miller Hemingway was born in what would later become Oak Park, Illinois, a western Chicago suburb. He was the second of six children born to Dr. Clarence Edmonds Hemingway and Grace Hall Hemingway.

Ernest’s family took him to Windemere, their summer home in northern Michigan, for the first time. Throughout 1917, Ernest would spend every summer there. His father would educate him how to study nature and live in the outdoors—hiking, camping, fishing, and hunting—both here and in the Oak Park region.

1905

Ernest started first grade at Oak Park.

1913

Ernest was a freshman at Oak Park and River Forest High Schools.

1915

He started writing for the high school newspaper, covering a wide range of educational and extracurricular activities in which he was involved or observed.

1916

He wrote poetry and short tales for his high school literary journal, generally based on his own experiences.

1917

He performed in Beau Brummel, the senior production, as just one illustration of his many interests across four years, which included a rigorous liberal arts curriculum, team sports, and debate. He graduated in June and began work as a reporter for The Kansas City Star. Here, he learnt to observe and write for a broad audience, focusing on the core of universally captivating experiences and use clear information and concise, economical, unsentimental language.

1918

He sailed to Europe on May 23 to drive an ambulance for the Italian Red Cross. He got seriously wounded in Fossalta in July after volunteering to deliver chocolate and cigarettes to frontline Italian soldiers. While recovering in Milan, he fell in love with a nurse named Agnes von Kurowsky. Hemingway was the first American to be wounded in WWI.

1919

While recuperating from his battle wounds in Oak Park, he received a letter from Agnes rejecting him and writing, “She hoped he would have a successful career.”

1920

He accepted a position with Cooperative Commonwealth, a publication for farmers in the Midwest.

1921

On September 3, he married Hadley Richardson.

1922

He accepted a position delivering feature pieces from Europe to The Toronto Star. He and Hadley travelled to Paris with letters of introduction from novelist Sherwood Anderson. Hemingway covered a wide range of events in Europe, including a war and a peace conference. In Paris, he met poet Ezra Pound, who, along with authors Gertrude Stein, F. Scott Fitzgerald, and James Joyce, came to admire Hemingway’s writing. 

1923

In Pamplona, Spain, he attended his first bullfight. In October, he travelled to Toronto to give birth to his son, John Hadley. He resigned from The Star and relocated to Paris to pursue a career as a novelist. Three Stories & Ten Poems, his debut book published

1924

He helped Ford Maddox Ford edit The Transatlantic Review, which published his writing. Several of his most well-known short stories published.

1925

In Our Time was released, and it contained numerous stories set in Michigan concerning the development of a semi-autobiographical figure named Nick Adams, culminating with “Big Two-Hearted River.” Charles Scribner’s Sons became Hemingway’s publisher for the rest of his life.

1926

The Sun Also Rises published by Charles Scribner’s Sons.

1927

Men without Women published.  The latter is the only cinematic adaptation of one of Hemingway’s almost twenty stories that he claimed he actually liked. Hadley divorced him, and he married Pauline Pfeiffer.

1928

He and Pauline fled Paris for Key West, Florida. Patrick, his son, was born. Ernest’s father commited suicide with a .32 handgun.

1929

Despite Boston censoring the serialized edition in Scribner’s magazine, he published A Farewell to Arms to favorable reviews and sales.

1930

In a car accident in Billings, Montana, he fractured his arm. This was just one of numerous unintentional injuries to his arms, legs, and brain that plagued him his whole life.

1931

Gregory, his son, was born.

1933

Winner Take Nothing published. He travelled on safari in Africa, which served as the backdrop for two of his major works, The Snows of Kilimanjaro and The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber.

1935

Green Hills of Africa, an account of his safari exploits published.

1937

During the Spanish Civil War, he worked as a war journalist. He donated money to the Loyalist cause and published his most purely political work, To Have and Have Not.

1939

He published Fifth Column and the First Forty-nine Stories, a collection of his stories and a drama about the Spanish Civil War.

1940

He married writer Martha Gellhorn and published For Whom the Bell Tolls, his critically acclaimed novel about Loyalist guerrillas fighting in the Spanish Civil War.

1942

He equipped the Pilar, his yacht, to hunt for German submarines in the Caribbean.

1944

As a war journalist, he witnessed D-Day and joined the 22nd Regiment, 4th Infantry Division for actions leading to the emancipation of Paris and the Battle of Hurtgenwald. He started a relationship with Mary Welsh, a journalist.

1945

In December, Martha Gellhorn divorced him.

1946

In March, he married Mary. They lived in his Finca Vigia in Cuba and then in Ketchum, Idaho.

1950

Across the River and Into the Trees, a novel about a romance set in post-World War II Europe published. Many critics panned it, claiming that Hemingway had lost his touch.

1952

The entirety of the novella The Old Man and the Sea published in an issue of Life magazine. It was a success for Hemingway after several years in which the public and critics questioned whether he would ever be considered a major writer again. Santiago, the hero of his narrative, is a virtually penniless old Cuban fisherman who demonstrates humility, compassion, and courage. 

1953

In January, he was critically injured in two separate plane crashes in Africa.  He also won the Pulitzer Prize for his book “The Old Man and the Sea.”

1959

Suffering deteriorating health, he attended the bullfights of Luis Miguel Dominguin and Antonio Ordez and celebrated his sixtieth birthday in Spain.

1960

Based on his bullfighting experiences, he published a nonfiction piece for Life magazine called The Dangerous Summer. It was his final piece to be published during his lifetime. 

1961

He received shock treatment for depression. He killed himself with a shotgun on July 2.

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Notable architecture beyond Frank Lloyd Wright in Oak Park https://www.bishopshallusa.com/2021/08/31/architecture-oak-park/ Tue, 31 Aug 2021 14:42:28 +0000 https://www.bishopshallusa.com/?p=18 This late-February heat wave often has the effect of making you want too head out and explore Chicago’s and its surroundings’ magnificent architecture. A good day out can involve  locating significant buildings in Oak Park that were not designed by Frank Lloyd

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This late-February heat wave often has the effect of making you want too head out and explore Chicago’s and its surroundings’ magnificent architecture. A good day out can involve  locating significant buildings in Oak Park that were not designed by Frank Lloyd Wright.

Clearly, the Prairie School’s forefather had a significant impact on Chicago’s western neighbor. His house and workshop are in Oak Park, and he created several additional structures in the area. In terms of Oak Park architecture, it’s just not right that Wright that can draw attention.

ERNEST HEMINGWAY BIRTHPLACE AND MUSEUM

The Ernest Hemingway Birthplace and Museum is more of a literary attraction than an architectural one, yet it should be included in any discussion of Oak Park architecture. The huge Victorian home was erected in 1890 for Hemingway’s grandparents, and he was born there in 1899. The great author only lived in Oak Park for a short years and apparently disliked it.
Despite this, it may be surprising to know  that the house had been abandoned for decades. In 1992, the Ernest Hemingway Foundation of Oak Park salvaged the property. They spent nine years remodeling the house to the condition it was in when Hemingway lived there. As such, it is an excellent example of Victorian architecture both inside and out.

PLEASANT HOME

This is an exceptionally early Prairie School example, however it was not built by Frank Lloyd Wright. Pleasant Home was designed by his former coworker George Washington Maher. Like Wright’s residences and structures in Oak Park, Maher’s design emphasizes horizontal lines and minimal adornment. It stands in sharp contrast to the Hemingway Birthplace’s massive and opulent Victorian architecture.

Pleasant Home was constructed in 1897, four years before Wright’s first Prairie School houses. Throughout the 1890s, both architects were moving toward that new architectural style.

SCOVILLE SQUARE

Scoville Square is a unique example of a commercial structure designed in the Prairie School style. The four story structure, located in the middle of Oak Park’s downtown, was built in 1909. Its style, like that of the adjacent Pleasant Home, emphasizes horizontal lines in tribute to the Illinois countryside. The glass and metal awning over the main entrance is a beatiful aspect of the structure. This lends a nice touch to the otherwise modest exterior.

Originally, the structure housed a Masonic Temple, as well as stores and offices. Gilmore’s Department Store inhabited the building for forty years after the Masons left. The building is now divided into smaller stores, offices, and restaurants. A good way to conclude your walk is ending up at   propose concluding your stroll at Winberie’s on the corner of Scoville Square. After a few hours of sightseeing, they will serve you some welcoming classic American food.

Any architectural tour in Oak Park is likely to include a lot of Frank Lloyd Wright. Without a doubt, his work in the village is critical. However, a visit to these alternative locations will provide you with a better understanding of the architecture that Wright rebelled against, borrowed from, and shaped his idead during the peak of his career.

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