Patrick Hemingway | |
---|---|
Born | Patrick Miller Hemingway June 28, 1928 Kansas City, Missouri, U.S. |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | Harvard University (B.A., 1950) |
Occupation(s) | Wildlife management; writer |
Spouses | Henrietta Broyles
(m. 1950; died 1963)Carol Thompson (m. 1982) |
Children | Mina Hemingway |
Parent(s) | Ernest Hemingway Pauline Pfeiffer |
Relatives | Gloria Hemingway (sibling) Jack Hemingway (paternal half-brother) |
Patrick Miller Hemingway (born June 28, 1928) is an American wildlife manager and writer who is novelist Ernest Hemingway's second son, and the first born to Hemingway's second wife Pauline Pfeiffer.[1] During his childhood he travelled frequently with his parents, and then attended Harvard University, graduated in 1950, and shortly thereafter moved to East Africa where he lived for 25 years. In Tanzania, Patrick was a professional big-game hunter and for over a decade he owned a safari business.[2] In the 1960s he was appointed by the United Nations to the Wildlife Management College in Tanzania as a teacher of conservation and wildlife. In the 1970s he moved to Montana where he managed the intellectual property of his father's estate. He edited his father's unpublished novel about a 1950s safari to Africa and published it with the title True at First Light (1999).