Biography | Pauline Pfeiffer

Ernest Hemingway and with his second wife, Pauline Pfeiffer

Pauline Pfeiffer was a journalist and the second wife of Ernest Hemingway. She was born in Parkersburg, Iowa, but spent most of her childhood growing up in St. Louis, Missouri. Her family was wealthy and Catholic. She studied at the University of Missouri School of Journalism, and worked at newspapers and magazines including Vanity Fair and Vogue. She was living in Paris and writing for Vogue when she first met Hadley Richardson and Ernest Hemingway.

Pauline was a frequent visitor to the Hemingways’ Paris apartment and accompanied them on trips. She was friends with Hadley first but soon began spending more and more time with Ernest.

In the spring of 1926, Hadley became aware of Ernest and Pauline’s affair; they divorced in April the following year. Less than a month after the divorce was finalized, Pauline and Ernest married in Paris on May 10, 1927.

When Pauline became pregnant, she and Hemingway left France, wanting to have their baby in the United States. They rented a home in Key West, Florida before moving to Pauline's family home in Piggott, Arkansas. On June 28, 1928, Patrick Hemingway, nicknamed "Mouse," was born. Three years later, on November 12, 1931, the couple welcomed another son, Gregory Hancock Hemingway, nicknamed "Gigi.” Both boys were born in Kansas City, but they would spend much of their childhood in the Hemingway home in Key West.

Ernest Hemingway and Pauline Pfeiffer.
Ernest Hemingway's second wife, Pauline Pfeiffer, cutting his hair. Ernest Hemingway Collection. John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum, Boston.

In late 1933, a generous uncle of Pauline’s provided the funds for Hemingway to realize a lifelong dream: to go on a hunting safari in East Africa, just as his boyhood hero, Theodore Roosevelt, had.

Ernest and Pauline were happy in Africa but back home tensions and dissatisfaction in the relationship grew. Ernest, growing restless, decided to leave his family and go with Martha Gellhorn to report on the Spanish Civil War.

After Pauline learned of Ernest’s relationship with Gellhorn she did everything she could to keep her marriage intact but nothing seemed to work.

“Life here is going on just the same as when you were here and it was so unattractive to you, and it won’t be any different when you get back, so if you are happy over there don’t come back here to be unhappy… but I hope you can come back and we can both be happy.”
Pauline Pfeiffer

Despite Pauline’s devotion to him throughout their 15 years — she often served as his editor and provided financial support for their family — Hemingway was intent on leaving her. On September 3, 1939, he told her he was leaving her for good. They divorced the next year, on November 4, 1940. Seventeen days later Ernest married Martha Gellhorn.

After the divorce, Pauline spent most of her time in Key West. In September of 1951, her nineteen-year-old son Gregory was arrested in Los Angeles. Pauline went to bail him out, and afterwards got into a fight with Ernest on the phone, with each blaming the other for what happened to their son. That night, on October 1, Pauline was rushed to the hospital after a rare and undiagnosed adrenal tumor burst. She died on the operating table. She was 56.

Born: July 22, 1895, Parkersburg, Iowa
Died: October 1, 1951, Hollywood, California

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