Exploring Hemingway at the JFK: Hemingway's life, works, and legacy.
Hemingway at the JFK
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Quick links to the JFK Library & Foundation's Hemingway programming, from exhibits to events.
Hemingway’s first love was Red Cross nurse Agnes von Kurowsky (1892-1984), whom he met while being treated for war wounds in Milan, 1918.
The JFK Library and Museum's permanent Hemingway exhibit (opened 2018).
Learn more about the JFK Library's permanent Hemingway exhibit, Hemingway: A Life Inspired, as well as past and upcoming Hemingway exhibits.
Elizabeth Hadley Richardson (later: Mowrer) (1891-1979) was Ernest Hemingway's first wife and the mother of their son, John (Bumby; later: Jack).
Hemingway's children: John ("Bumby"/"Jack") Hadley Nicanor Hemingway, Patrick ("Mouse") Miller Hemingway, Gregory/Gloria ("Gigi") Hancock Hemingway.
Hemingway's family: his family of origin, his wives, and his children.
Hemingway's family of origin: his parents and siblings.
Ernest Hemingway was the second of six children born to Dr. Clarence (Ed) and Grace Hall Hemingway: Marcelline, Ernest, Ursula, Madelaine, Carol, and Leicester.
A snapshot view of Hemingway's wives (and one fiancée).
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Ernest Hemingway met his third wife, writer and war correspondent Martha Gellhorn (1908-1998), in 1936. They married in 1940 and divorced in 1945.
War correspondent Mary Welsh (1908-1986) married Ernest Hemingway in 1946. As his widow, she was the initial custodian of his literary legacy.
Learn more about the PEN/Hemingway Award and other Hemingway news from the JFK Library and Foundation.
Fashion journalist Pauline Marie Pfeiffer (1895-1951) was Hemingway's second wife. Ernest and Pauline had two children, Patrick and Gregory (later: Gloria).