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Leicester C. Hemingway, only brother to the great American novelist Ernest Hemingway,
was born in Oak Park, Illinois, on April 1, 1915. Like Ernest, Leicester was a
writer, world traveler, and avid outdoorsman. He worked as a newspaper reporter,
photo editor, boat builder, and authored many articles on fishing and outdoor
activities for men's publications, along with six books. Among these books was
a
novel entitled The Sound of the Trumpet (1953), which
was based on his experiences in France and Germany during World War II. This work
received slight praise by critics, but many seemed to think that Leicester was
simply living in the shadow of his older brother. A review of this work in The New York Times declared that Leicester Hemingway was
part of the first younger generation shaped by the writings of Ernest Hemingway.
Leicester’s most famous and well-received work, a biography entitled My Brother, Ernest Hemingway (1961), is considered by
some to be the finest work on the subject. For the last five years of his life,
Leicester focused his attentions on The Bimini Out Islands
News, a small monthly newsletter on fishing. |
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Besides his work as a writer, it is not as widely known that Leicester was also the
founder of a new island republic off the coast of Jamaica, declared New Atlantis,
on
July 4, 1964. Built up from a depth of fifty feet, the 8 x 30 ft. “country” was
constructed with iron pipes, stones, bamboo, and stainless steel. Essentially,
it
amounted to a bamboo raft, anchored by a railroad axle and an old Ford engine
block,
six miles off the west coast of Jamaica near Bluefields. |
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The purpose of this tiny new nation was to house the headquarters of the
International Marine Research Society, an organization founded by Hemingway. This
society’s mission was to further marine research, raise funds for this research,
and
to build a scientifically valuable aquarium in Jamaica. Hemingway also believed
that
by creating this new country he could help protect Jamaican fishing, and this
was
another of his goals. |
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There were six original inhabitants of New Atlantis, including Leicester, his wife
Doris, their daughters Anne and Hilary (seven and three years old at the time),
Washington international public relations specialist, Edward K. Moss, and his
assistant, Julia Cellini. Leicester was elected the first president in 1965. |
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To fund the construction of New Atlantis, Hemingway used all the proceeds from his
biography, My Brother, Ernest Hemingway, and though
the island was quite small, he had plans to expand it in the future. Unfortunately,
this never came to be, as the tiny island nation of New Atlantis was destroyed
in a
storm only a few years after its creation. |
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Late in his life, Leicester was diagnosed with a severe case of Type II diabetes,
and, after suffering through five operations and the possibility of losing his
legs,
he decided to end his life in 1982 at the age of 67. Tragically, he was not the
first or last in his family to commit suicide. Ernest also shot himself in 1961,
at
the age of 62, his sister, Ursula, and grandniece, Margaux, died at their own
hands,
and his father, Dr. Clarence Edmonds Hemingway, killed himself in 1928 after
suffering from depression. |