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  1. Mary Welsh Hemingway (née Welsh; April 5, 1908 – November 26, 1986) was an American journalist and author who was the fourth wife and widow of Ernest Hemingway.

  2. Mary Welsh Hemingway was a journalist and author, and the fourth wife of Ernest Hemingway. She met Ernest in London in 1944 while working as a WWII correspondent for Time and...

  3. Mar 1, 2022 · Here, an excerpt from a new biography of Mary Welsh Hemingway, the journalist who became Hemingway's fourth wife.

  4. Apr 6, 2021 · Before he ended his life with a gunshot to the head in July 1961, Hemingway had four wives who were remarkable in their own right: Hadley Richardson, Pauline 'Fife' Pfeiffer, Martha Gellhorn and...

  5. She was the first woman war journalist named to the London branch for a major U.S. magazine. While in London, Mary moved in the highest circles; her work included broadcasts for the BBC and several documentaries designed to increase U.S. awareness of the effects of the war on the British home front.

  6. Sep 12, 2023 · The famous writer, then in his mid-50s, had hired a pilot to take him and his fourth wife, Mary Welsh, on a sightseeing tour aboard a small Cessna. During the flight, “their plane clipped a...

  7. Jun 26, 2017 · Mary V. Dearborn’s new biography, “Hemingway” (Knopf), is hardly full of revelations. With the witnesses almost all dead, and the archives combed through as if by addicts looking for ...

  8. Nov 28, 1986 · Mary Hemingway, a foreign correspondent for Time and Life magazines during World War II and the widow of Ernest Hemingway, died early Wednesday morning at St. Luke's Hospital after a long...

  9. Picturing Hemingway: A Writer in His Time. Hemingway's marriage to Martha Gellhorn had difficulties from its outset in 1940, and its dissolution became certain when he met Mary Welsh, a member of Time 's European staff, shortly after he arrived in England to begin covering World War II.

  10. In 1944, Ernest Hemingway met Time and Life correspondent Mary Welsh while in London to cover the Allied invasion of France for Collier's.

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