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Pilar, Hemingway's cabin cruiser - its final resting place at Finca Vigia in Cuba |
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Ernest Hemingway aboard Pilar in Key West, Florida (1934 or 1935) |
This past March Break our
family was back in Cuba. It was our fourth visit to the Cameleon resort in
Jibicoa - along the coast some 45 minutes east of Havana.
We had done many of the
organized day-trips from Jibicoa on previous occasions, some of them two or
three times. What I particular hoped to do on this visit was to go back to Finca Vigia (Lookout Farm), the former
home of Ernest Hemingway (1940-1961). The Hemingways bequeathed it to the
Cuban government, with the understanding that it would be turned into a museum
devoted to the famous and influential writer, who was also revered on the
Caribbean island that had become his home for the last two decades of his life.
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Undated photo of Hemingway at the south-west corner of Finca Vigia in Cuba |
I had been to the museum
back in 2010, during our first trip to Cuba, but that turned out to be a rather
rushed visit. The rest of my family had no interest - the children had no
knowledge of the author, and my wife is hostile to the man. I got to see the
house and, by leaning in through the doors and windows, I was able to get some
excellent views of most of the rooms in the ranch-styled dwelling. Here is a
link to the blog post I wrote in February, 2012 which documents that original
trip.
Because of the rush imposed
by the rest of my family back in 2010, I didn't get the chance to wander around
the property. And it upset me to discover later that Hemingway's pool and, more
importantly, his fishing boat Pilar was
but 100 yards from the house - and I missed it. The desire to see the boat, perched
on concrete blocks beneath a carport-styled protective roof, became even
stronger after reading Hemingway's Boat a couple of years ago. This excellent book, by
Paul Hendrickson, was published in 2012. It tells the story of Hemingway's life
by focusing on his love of fishing and providing a full account of the boat he
bought in the mid-30s, and the adventures he got up to plying the waters of the
Gulf Stream ("the great blue river"), just off the northern coast of
Cuba. I had to get back to Finca Vigia
to see Pilar up close. But I knew the
rest of my family would not be interested in joining me. This would be a
solitary pilgrimage - or so I thought.
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Richard and Brenda at Finca Vigia |
A day or two into our stay
at Jibicoa, I was waiting patiently to talk to the Nolitours representative,
Roberto, about options for getting to Finca
Vigia by myself. I was thinking of taking an official taxi (parked just outside
the resort), or of finding a freelance driver to do the job - perhaps the same
guy who had taken us to Havana in 2013. As I was waiting, I overheard the
couple sitting at Roberto's desk ask him about the chance to visit the
Hemingway Museum. Not shy in this sort of situation, I jumped in to explain
that I, too, was a keen fan of the author and wanted to get to his former home.
Within an hour all the plans were made. My brand new 'Hemingway friends',
Richard and Brenda, had agreed to split costs and collaborate on a visit to Finca Vigia, on the outskirts of Havana
- plus a trip as well to the village of Cojimar, where Hemingway often docked
his boat. Cojimar is the model for the fishing village described in The Old
Man and The Sea.
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A confident fisher already - Hemingway (aged 5) near Horton's Bay in Upper Michigan |
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Freshwater fishing in 1916 (aged 17) |
Ernest Hemingway learned his
love of the outdoors from his father, who introduced him to hunting and fishing
during their annual summer vacations at their cottage on Walloon Lake in Upper
Michigan. Hemingway was fishing every summer until his early twenties, when he
and his wife moved to Paris. During his European years (most of the 1920s) he
did only a bit of fishing, but it wasn't until he moved to Key West, Florida, in
the early 30s, that his interest in fishing switched from freshwater fishing in
lakes and rivers to deep-sea ocean fishing from a fully-equipped cabin cruiser.
There were two friends of
Hemingway's in Key West who got him hooked on deep-sea fishing. One was Charles
Thompson, the owner of a hardware store. Hemingway had known him since his
first visit to Key West in 1928. Thompson had an old-fashioned 19' boat; he
took Hemingway out fishing in it on day-trips. Later, when Ernest settled in
the town, he met Joe Russell, who ran a bar there called Sloppy Joe's. He had
reputedly been a long-time "rum-runner" from Cuba. He used to sell
rum to Hemingway in the early 30s - the final years of America's Prohibition
era. Russell had an impressive 34' cabin cruiser called Anita. It was from this boat that he introduced Hemingway to marlin
fishing.
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Hemingway (far left) on Joe Russell's cabin cruiser Anita in Key West (1933) |
In April 1932 Russell took
Charles Thompson, Hemingway, Hemingway's cousin Bud White, and a couple of
others out on a fishing trip - over towards Cuba. The original plan was for a
relaxing two weeks of fishing. But it turned into a two-month extended marathon
of fishing focused exclusively on marlin. Hemingway became obsessed with the
hunt for these huge and majestic fish. In his first couple of years of serious
Marlin fishing, he caught 91 of them.
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Hemingway proudly displays a marlin trophy in Havana Harbour (July, 1934) |
When Ernest and Pauline
Hemingway did a two-month safari in East Africa in January and February of
1934, they were accompanied by Key West friend Charles Thompson. He and
Hemingway must have spent a good deal of time talking about their deep-sea
fishing exploits; because when they got back to the U.S. in April, Hemingway
had made up his mind to buy his own cabin cruiser. He had done his research,
and his heart was set on getting a Wheeler boat. He had previously contacted the
Wheeler Shipyard - located in Brooklyn - the previous year; and they had sent
him by mail a brochure of their boats from the 1933 model year. In his book Hemingway's
Boat, Hendrickson quotes boat historian Anthony Mollica describing Wheeler
boats: "A Wheeler is a Packard. A prewar Packard. Big and strong and
comfortable and sturdy. Beamy. Sea-kindly. Very well thought out. Extremely
well made".
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Pilar was built by the Wheeler Shipyard in Brooklyn, New York in 1934 |
The catalogue price for this
boat was $7,000. Hemingway had $3,500 to hand. How to pay for it? Hemingway had
a scheme in mind. He had met magazine publisher Arnold Gingrich in New York in
January, 1933. Since then, Gingrich had been at work planning a new magazine
for men called Esquire. He had been
lobbying Hemingway to write for his new publication - he was particularly keen
to have him featured in the debut issue. Hemingway contacted Gingrich and
proposed a deal: if Gingrich gave him an advance of $3,500, he promised to
submit regular articles for the magazine, until the debt was paid off. Gingrich
agreed. The deal worked to their mutual benefit; Hemingway got his boat, and
the first issue of Esquire - which
featured a piece by Hemingway about marlin fishing - sold 100,000 copies.
Ernest Hemingway visited
Wheeler's Shipyard in Brooklyn in early April, 1934. He ordered a 38' twin
Playmate cabin cruiser. These were stock boats, but he asked for a number of
modifications: he wanted a black hull, instead of the standard white; he also
had copper screens added to enclose part of the cockpit. The main power to the
boat would be supplied by a 75 horse-power Chrysler Crown reduction gear motor
- this would provide a cruising speed of 16 knots. The smaller trolling motor
would be a 40 horse-power Lycoming, providing 5 knots.
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The rear of Pilar showing the fighting chair |
The name to be painted to
the rear and sides of the boat was Pilar
of Key West. The name came from a shrine and feria in Saragossa, Spain that celebrates Nuestra SeƱora del Pilar - Our Lady of the Pillar. A feria is an annual feast that takes
place in southern France and Spain, which features bull-fighting. Pilar had
been a secret nickname that Pauline and Ernest had used for her when they began their
adulterous affair in 1926. Hemingway also pointed out later that if he had ever
had a daughter [he had three sons], he would have called her Pilar. In his 1940
novel about the Spanish Civil War, For Whom The Bell Tolls, Hemingway
includes a character called Pilar: she is the part-gypsy partner of Pablo, the
leader of the guerrilla band that Robert Jordan teams up with in the mountains.
She is an admirable character - an earth-mother type, who serves as the
steadfast centre of the guerrilla camp.
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Richard beside Pilar
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It took about five weeks for
Hemingway to get his boat. When it was finished, employees of the Wheeler
Shipyard sailed Pilar down to Miami.
Hemingway met them there, paid off the balance he owed of about $4,500, and
then piloted the boat down to Key West - arriving on May 12, 1934. Generally,
Pilar was docked in the Key West harbour - just a ten-minute walk away from his
house on Whitehead Street.
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The starboard side of Pilar |
Hemingway made his first
crossing to Cuba with the Pilar on
July 19, 1934. It's about 90 miles due south of Key West. Travelling at an
average speed of 10 knots, Pilar
could get to Havana in about a day's sailing. But, on that first trip down, the
water pump to the main engine broke about three miles off the Cuban coast, and
the Chrysler Crown motor began to overheat. Hemingway switched to the much
slower trolling motor - taking two hours to cover a stretch that normally would
have lasted twenty minutes.
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Pauline (Hemingway's second wife), Ernest and his three boys in Bimini (1935) |
During the first few years
of his adventures with the Pilar, Hemingway did most of his deep-sea fishing in
Bimini (a small collection of islands on the western edge of the Bahamas). He
lived in Bimini from mid-April to mid-August 1935, and spent a lot of time
there during the fishing seasons of '36 and '37. In those years, Hemingway
wasn't focused exclusively on marlin. He fished a wide variety of other
species: swordfish, tuna, sailfish, kingfish, snook, tarpon, wahoos, barracuda,
bonito, mako shark, etc. He developed a special interest in the blue-fin tuna,
and is reputed to be the first angler to land whole and clean one of these huge
tunas - all previous attempts, apparently, failed because sharks would attack
and mutilate the fish after they had been snagged on the hook. Hemingway's
specimen was 381 pounds, and it took him 70 minutes to tire it, pull it in, and
hoist it onto his boat - across a large wooden roller onto the
specially-designed low-cut stern.
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Hemingway deep-sea fishing on the Pilar in 1934 |
In his book Hemingway's
Boat Paul Hendrickson gives a detailed description of Pilar (pages
138-141). It was 38 feet long and had a 12 feet beam (its width at the broadest
point). The cabin sides and deck were built of Canadian fir and Honduran
mahogany. The cockpit at the rear of the boat could fit seven or eight people
quite comfortably; there were two long cushioned bunks for lounging on, and
small seats could be added during meals. A small table was stowed a few feet
behind the wheel; it would be fixed on two outer legs. In the middle of the
rear deck was the "fighting chair". It had a ladder-styled slat-back
and leather-cushioned arm rests. This chair was bolted firmly to the deck and
rotated 360°.
Pilar could hold six people
in the sleeping compartments and two more in the open-air cockpit (which
featured roll-down canvas sides and copper screens, to help keep away the bugs
at night). Access to the sleeping compartment, forward of the cockpit, was
through a half door and companionway. There were upper and lower berths, a
tight toilet and a cubbyhole galley for fixing meals.
Loaded for a cruise, Pilar
had a compartment that held 2,400 pounds of ice, in order to cool fresh fruits
and vegetables - the avocadoes and mangos, for example - and preserve the
captured fish over many days. The ice was also important to cool the beer and
wine, and to add to the many daiquiris and mojitos! Hemingway also stored 100
gallons of drinking water.
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The port side of Pilar |
Although it could cruise
easily at 16 knots, Hemingway usually sailed Pilar at 10 knots, in order to save gas. The boat had a 300-gallon
capacity fuel tank. But he could store another 100 gallons in portable drums
that fit in a forward compartment. If he was busy fishing, rather than covering
a long distance, Hemingway would switch to the Lycoming trolling motor - he
could troll all day with that motor, and only eat up 10 gallons of fuel.
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Hemingway on Pilar's flying bridge |
Pilar
was
an impressive sight on the water. It rode low and long, with a shiny black hull
and a handsome green canvas roof and topside. When Hemingway sailed her out of
harbour (Havana or Cojimar) in the early mornings, he liked to stand on the top
deck - the flying bridge. This flying bridge was added in 1937. It had a second
set of duplicate controls for the engines - throttles and levers which came up
over the cockpit via several metal pipes. When he wasn't up on the flying
bridge - which gave him a better view of
the surrounding waters - he was usually at the helm, on the port-side of the
cockpit, or taking a nap on one of the cushioned benches. The helm consisted of
a lighted binnacle, which held a compass, a wheel and various engine controls.
Fishing from the Pilar for marlin became Hemingway's main
hobby and recreation. Once he had discovered the thrill of fishing for these
giant fish - they could be anywhere between 50-1200 pounds in size - nothing
else would do. He also loved to share the sport with others; and, over the 27
years he had Pilar, he welcomed
hundreds of people onto his boat - sharing his knowledge and enthusiasm, and
tutoring neophytes in the basics of deep-sea angling. To get a sense of what it
was like to fight one of these giant marlins, read Hemingway's epic thirty-page
account of such a struggle in the "Bimini" section of his posthumous
novel Islands in the Stream (1970).
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Hemingway (right) and Joe Russell in Havana Harbour in 1932 |
Hemingway usually had a
"first mate" with him on board - to help with the sailing, but also
to serve as a general factotum: fixing drinks, cooking meals, and providing
company. The first man to play this role was Carlos GutiƩrrez - a commercial
smack-fishing captain in his fifties. Hemingway had met this Cuban fisherman
back in April, 1932 during the two-month marathon of marlin-fishing he had
undertaken with Charles Thompson and Bud White. He had been much impressed -
and hired him initially to serve as first mate for the rest of that first
summer with Pilar (1934). GuitiƩrrez
was replaced in 1938 by another experienced Cuban - Gregorio Fuentes. This
native Canary Islander - then 41 years old - would work loyally as first mate
for Hemingway for the rest of Hemingway's time in Cuba (until 1961). He died in
2002, at the age of 104.
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Hemingway and Carlos Gutierrez on the Pilar in 1934 |
After Hemingway's death in
1961, Fuentes often claimed that he had been bequeathed Pilar. This was confirmed by Mary Welsh Hemingway, the author's
fourth and final wife: she wrote in August 1961, just two months after Ernest's
suicide, that Hemingway had left her instructions - in a letter that
accompanied the will - to give Pilar
to Fuentes. But, as Hendrickson points out, this conflicts with a letter she
wrote in February, 1964, in which she said: "We are letting Pilar rot away in Cuba because I know
Papa couldn't bear the thought of anyone else being her commander". And,
then, in her autobiographical book about her life with Ernest, How It Was,
she says she came back to their Cuban home, Finca
Vigia, and told Fuentes to "take her [Pilar] out and sink her in the current [the Gulf Stream]."
That, of course, didn't happen. She then claims that "the Cubans used Pilar as a workboat for a while, and
then installed her (poor thing) as an exhibit on the Finca lawn, so I was told."
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Hemingway's loyal "first mate" Gregorio Fuentes (right) |
In 2005 someone showed
author Paul Hendrickson a two-page document which said that Fuentes had kept Pilar in the harbour at Cojimar, until
he decided to give it to the government. It was moved from the fishing village
(Gregorio's home) up to Finca Vigia,
to serve - apart from the house itself - as the museum's main exhibit.
My new 'Hemingway friends' -
Richard and Brenda - and I reached Finca
Vigia at 10 a.m. on March 13, 2014. The place is now known as Museo
Hemingway. It is perched on the top of a hill in a suburb of Havana called San
Francisco de Paula. Back in Hemingway's time it was way out in the country,
about nine miles south of the capital; now it is part of the sprawling,
suburban shantytown radiating out from the densely-populated city.
After paying our entrance
fee, we got back in the taxi and it delivered us up the sloping hill to the
parking lot next to the souvenir shop. We walked over to the house. Everything
was as I remembered it, but there were a lot more people about than on my
previous visit. The sun was out - which was a relief; it had been threatening
to rain all morning. I wanted good light for my photographs.
One result of the impending
downfall was that the staff at the museum had closed up all the doors and windows.
Even though entry into the house is forbidden, they normally have most of the doors
and windows wide open, so that you can lean into the building and take as many
photographs as you wish. Today, I had to wait for a couple of understanding
guards to open a window here, and a door there, for a minute or two, whilst I
quickly snapped some photos of the interior. This wasn't too disappointing for
me because I got plenty of good pictures of the house on my previous visit in
2010.
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A view of Finca Vigia from the south - the tower is partly hidden on the left |
At the back of the house,
just off its north-west corner, sits a three-storey tower. It was built for
Hemingway by his fourth wife, Mary Welsh; she intended it as a quiet retreat,
where Ernest could do his daily writing in the morning and early afternoon.
Hemingway didn't like the too-solitary feel of the place. He preferred to write
in his bedroom - standing up at his typewriter. The tower was abandoned
primarily to the large crowd of cats that roamed the property.
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At the top of the tower |
It was from the landing at
the top of the tower stairs that I got my first glimpse of the swimming pool
and boat through the trees to the west. They lay about 100 metres from the
house. We walked in their direction via a long path of paving stones - the path
edged by a thin, intermittent curtain of
bamboo.
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The swimming pool at Finca Vigia |
The old-fashioned, concrete, in-ground pool is huge. It was empty of
water, coated with pale-blue paint. It looked to be about 10-12 high at the
deep-end. On either corner of the pool - at the shallow end - are a couple of
outhouses; these, presumably were his-and-hers changing rooms for visiting
guests. Ava Gardner didn't bother - she swam naked alone in the pool during one
of her visits to Finca Vigia in the
1950s.
The Pilar rests perched on sets of concrete blocks just a little way beyond
the pool. It sits where the tennis court used to be. There is a large
corrugated plastic roof about twenty feet above the boat, protecting it
primarily from the glaring mid-day sun. It is like a huge carport, open to the
wind and rain. The boat has lost all of its varnished, shiny glory. It is
coated in grime and the brass and copper fittings are corroded and slowly
turning green. Do they provide occasional renovation to the boat? I don't know.
When I was there, it certainly looked in need of some tender loving care.
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Hemingway's pet cemetery beside the Pilar |
On the southern side of the
boat, between it and the pool, are a row of four small tombstones; they mark
the graves of some of Hemingway's favourite pets - including Black, a stray dog
he adopted in the U.S., and brought back to Cuba.
Back at the house, I got
some more photographs looking at the house and tower from the grounds on the
southern side of the property. Richard and Brenda walked over to the souvenir
shop. I hung around near the front door. I wanted to get some good shots of the
entry into the house - which I had failed to get on my previous visit. I set my
tripod up and waited. I got some good shots of a small group of women clustered
tightly on the threshold. Then a few of me standing alone, ringing the large "doorbell".
I yanked on the rope, thinking: For whom the bell tolls; for me and thee. Then
as I vacated the steps in front of the house, one of the many neighbourhood
dogs that roam the place came over and dropped comfortably there, near the
entrance, as though he owned the place.
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... it tolls for thee - and me! |
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Hemingway on the flying bridge |
Hemingway fans visiting the
Havana-area of Cuba for the first time must visit Finca Vigia. It really is inspiring. For more about the house -
including some good shots of the interior, check out my previous blog post from
February, 2012.
Hemingway enthusiasts might
also consider checking out my photo essay about Hemingway's life in Paris in
the 20s, published in October, 2013.
Resources: Most of the
technical details about Pilar come
from Paul Hendrickson's excellent book Hemingway's Boat: Everything He Loved in Life, and Lost, 1934-1961 (published in 2012); other background on Finca Vigia from Hemingway: The Final
Years, the fifth volume of Michael Reynolds superb biography; the book by
Mary Welsh Hemingway (his fourth wife) is How It Was (published in
1976).
Photographs
© Clive W. Baugh
(using
a Nikon D7000 with a Nikkor 18-105 mm zoom lens)
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Pilar leaving Havana Harbour with outriggers already deployed; Hemingway is at the helm, on the flying bridge; Mary Welsh Hemingway follows in her launch Tin Kid |
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ReplyDeleteSpam.
DeleteI enjoyed reading this Clive. Good pictures as usual. Tony
ReplyDeleteWell written with lots of interesting information. I am glad that we were able to visit the Finca with you. Richard and Brenda
ReplyDeleteGreat job, Clive...I love the pics, especially the vintage ones...Keep 'em coming!
ReplyDelete