Description:

Hemingway Ernest


Original Photo of Hemingway’s White Tower Which His Wife Mary Designed to House Their Many Cats & as a Writing Studio for Ernest


Photograph of the White Tower. Silver gelatin black & white, 8” x 9.5”. Built in 1947 on his Finca La Vigia property in San Francisco de Paula, Cuba, at the suggestion of Mary Hemingway, the four story “White Tower” was a place to house their 30 cats, getting them out of the main house, and a place for her husband to write. With a view that went clear to the sea, while Hemingway did go there at times to read or edit what he had written, such as “The Old Man and the Sea,” he did most of his serious writing in the main house. Fine condition.



This photograph is from the personal property of Roberto Herrera Sotolongo, the personal secretary and friend of Ernest Hemingway. Herrera and Hemingway met in 1942, when Herrera became a crewmember aboard Hemingway’s boat the “Pilar”, at the height of World War II, when Hemingway patrolled the Gulf Stream for German submarines for the US Government.



Herrera and Hemingway became friends while sharing in their mutual interests of hunting, fishing aboard the “Pilar”, and drinking at their favorite bar, La Floridita. They also attended bullfights, cockfights, and jai alai together, and Herrera, an avid photographer, captured many photos and movies of all these activities. Hemingway called Herrera “El Monstruo” (the Monster), and signed much of his correspondence to Herrera “Mr. Papa”. By the mid-1940s, Hemingway was travelling extensively and for long periods of time, leaving his Cuban home, Finca La Vigia (Lookout Farm), in the hands of Herrera.



After Hemingway’s 1961 suicide, Herrera was appointed to represent Hemingway’s affairs in Cuba, including the deeding of the property and contents of “Finca La Vigia” to the Cuban people “as a place of opportunity for wider education and research, to be maintained in his memory.” The property became a museum, and Herrera acted as Conservator until his death in 1970.


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