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  1. Pfeiffer was born in Parkersburg, Iowa to Paul Pfeiffer, a real estate agent, and Mary Alice Downey, [2] on July 22, 1895, moving to St. Louis in 1901, where she went to school at Visitation Academy of St. Louis. Although her family later moved to Piggott, Arkansas, Pfeiffer stayed in Missouri to study at the University of Missouri School of ...

  2. 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.

  3. Pauline Marie Pfeiffer was born July 22, 1895, in Parkersburg, Iowa. She moved with her family to St. Louis in 1901, in time to start first grade at the Academy of the Visitation. Less than a month after her high school graduation from the Academy in June 1913, the family moved to Piggott, Arkansas. Two years later, she headed off to the ...

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  5. Pauline Marie Pfeiffer was an American journalist and second wife of American novelist, short-story writer and journalist Ernest Hemingway. Pfeiffer, a graduate from University of Missouri School of Journalism, started her career with newspapers in Cleveland and New York. She then worked with up-scale magazines ‘Vanity Fair’ and ‘Vogue’.

  6. Pauline Pfeiffer Hemingway on safari, c. 1933-4. Ernest Hemingway Photographs Collection 07430. Bythe time of the safari, Hemingway was known to his children and friends as Papa; Pauline appears in the safari memoir Green Hills of Africa as “P.O.M”—Poor Old Mama.

  7. Mar 27, 2024 · Pauline Pfeiffer (1895–1951) Pauline Pfeiffer was a successful journalist who wrote for such magazines as Vanity Fair and Vogue. From 1927 to 1940, she was married to author Ernest Hemingway, being the second of his four wives. At her family’s home in Piggott (Clay County), Hemingway wrote some of the works that would contribute to a 1954 ...

  8. The house was a gift from Pauline’s uncle, Gus Pfeiffer, who remained a financial benefactor throughout their marriage. Along with paying for their house, their apartment in Paris, their first and second cars, and other support, Gus provided $25,000 in 1933 for the Hemingways’ African safari, which resulted in much of Ernest’s literary ...

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