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Listed below are the private residences in the United States of famous American writers. These writers' homes, where many ] books were written, also inspired the settings of many notable poems, short stories and novels. | Listed below are the private residences in the United States of famous American writers. These writers' homes, where many ] books were written, also inspired the settings of many notable poems, short stories and novels. | ||
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==Alabama== | ==Alabama== | ||
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Revision as of 22:52, 22 January 2025
List of homes of American writersListed below are the private residences in the United States of famous American writers. These writers' homes, where many Pulitzer Prize-winning books were written, also inspired the settings of many notable poems, short stories and novels.
Alabama
Writer | Image | Residence | Years | Coordinates | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Truman Capote | The Faulk home site | 1927–1933 | Monroeville 31°31′26″N 87°19′26″W / 31.52395°N 87.32389°W / 31.52395; -87.32389 |
Capote lived with his mother's relatives in the Faulk home from 1927 to 1933 and spent several summers here after 1933. | |
F. Scott Fitzgerald | The Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald Museum | 1931–1932 | Montgomery 32°21′32″N 86°17′32″W / 32.35883°N 86.29227°W / 32.35883; -86.29227 |
Fitzgerald worked on the novel, Tender Is The Night, in this house. This is also the last home the Fitzeralds lived together as a family. |
California
Connecticut
Writer | Image | Residence | Years | Coordinates | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Eugene O'Neill | Monte Cristo Cottage | 1900–1920 | New London 41°19′55″N 72°5′46.5″W / 41.33194°N 72.096250°W / 41.33194; -72.096250 |
O'Neill's summer childhood home and setting of two of his plays. | |
Mark Twain | Twain House | 1874–1891 | Hartford 41°46′1.5″N 72°42′5.0″W / 41.767083°N 72.701389°W / 41.767083; -72.701389 |
Twain wrote many of his most popular novels in this house. | |
Harriet Beecher Stowe | Stowe House | 1873–1896 | Hartford 41°46′1.14″N 72°42′2.81″W / 41.7669833°N 72.7007806°W / 41.7669833; -72.7007806 |
Stowe spent the last 23 years of her life in this house. Stowe is best remembered for her influential and best selling antil-slavery novel, Uncle Tom's Cabin (1852). | |
Noah Webster | Webster house | 1758-1774 | West Hartford 41°44′46.27″N 72°44′47.4″W / 41.7461861°N 72.746500°W / 41.7461861; -72.746500 |
Webster's birthplace. He lived in the house until he left for college. |
Florida
Georgia
Illinois
Name | Image | Residence | Years | Coordinates | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gwendolyn Brooks | image needed | Brooks House--Chicago | 1953–1994 | Chicago 41°45′35″N 87°36′25″W / 41.75959°N 87.60698°W / 41.75959; -87.60698 |
American 20th century poet and teacher. First Black poet to win the Pulitzer Prize (1950). Private residence. |
Ernest Hemingway | Birthplace of Ernest Hemingway | 1899–1905 | Oak Park 41°53′34″N 87°47′42″W / 41.892778°N 87.795081°W / 41.892778; -87.795081 |
Birthplace and childhood home of legendary American novelist and journalist who was awarded the 1954 Nobel Prize in Literature. The house is also a museum open to the public. | |
Vachel Lindsay | Vachel Lindsay House | 1879–1931 | Springfield 39°47′46″N 89°38′59″W / 39.79616°N 89.64964°W / 39.79616; -89.64964 |
American poet known for his performance poetry. | |
Carl Sandburg | Birthplace of Carl Sandburg | 1878–1896 | Galesburg 40°56′11″N 90°21′57″W / 40.93650°N 90.36583°W / 40.93650; -90.36583 |
Pulitzer Prize-winning poet and biographer. |
Louisiana
Name | Image | Place | Years | Coordinates | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Robert Penn Warren | Robert Penn Warren House | 1941–1942 | Prairieville 30°18′30″N 90°58′25″W / 30.30823°N 90.9736°W / 30.30823; -90.9736 |
The private residence, known as Twin Oaks, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. |
Maine
Maryland
Name | Image | Residence | Years | Coordinates | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
H.L. Mencken | H. L. Mencken House | 1883–1956 | Baltimore 39°17′15.2″N 76°38′30.6″W / 39.287556°N 76.641833°W / 39.287556; -76.641833 |
The house was opened to the public in 2019. | |
Rachel Carson | Carson House, Colesville | 1956–1964 | Colesville 39°2′48″N 77°0′2″W / 39.04667°N 77.00056°W / 39.04667; -77.00056 |
Carson wrote her legendary work, "Silent Spring", in this house in 1962. | |
Edgar Allan Poe | Poe House, Baltimore | 1833–1835 | Baltimore 39°17′29″N 76°37′59″W / 39.29150°N 76.63319°W / 39.29150; -76.63319 |
Poe moved into his aunt Elizabeth's rental house in 1833 after he graduated from Westpoint Military Academy. | |
Gertrude Stein | David Bachrach House | 1892 | Baltimore 39°18′50.6″N 76°38′9.5″W / 39.314056°N 76.635972°W / 39.314056; -76.635972 |
The Bachrach house, also known as the Gertrude Stein house, is not open to the public. Stein was a neice of Mrs. David Bachrach. |
Massachusetts
Michigan
Name | Image | Residence | Years | Coordinates | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ernest Hemingway | Windemere Cottage | 1900–1921 | Petoskey 45°16′51″N 85°00′04″W / 45.28081°N 85.00108°W / 45.28081; -85.00108 |
The cottage was used during Hemingway's childhood as his family's summer home. Hemingway and his first wife, Hadley Richardson spent their honeymoon in the cottage. It is a private residence. | |
Theodore Roethke | Roethke Houses | 1911–1925 | Saginaw 43°25′00″N 83°59′14″W / 43.41667°N 83.98722°W / 43.41667; -83.98722 |
The house at 1759 Gratiot was known as The Stone House and was built by Roethke's uncle Carl. The house next door, at 1805 Gratiot, is Roethke's childhood home, and was built by his father, Otto. Roethke's sister, June, lived in the house until her death in 1997. |
Minnesota
Name | Image | Residence | Years | Coordinates | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
F. Scott Fitzgerald | F. Scott Fitzgerald House | 1918–1920 | Saint Paul 44°56′29.5″N 93°7′30.5″W / 44.941528°N 93.125139°W / 44.941528; -93.125139 |
Fitzgerald re-wrote the draft of his first novel, This Side of Paradise in this house. | |
Sinclair Lewis | Sinclair Lewis Boyhood Home | 1889–1902 | Sauk Centre 45°44′14″N 94°57′26.5″W / 45.73722°N 94.957361°W / 45.73722; -94.957361 |
Lewis's boyhood home. He is the first American to receive the Nobel Prize in Literature. |
Mississippi
Name | Image | Residence | Years | Coordinates | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
William Faulkner | Rowan Oak | 1930–1962 | Oxford 34°21′35″N 89°31′29″W / 34.3598°N 89.5247°W / 34.3598; -89.5247 |
Faulkner penciled the plot of his Pulitzer Prize–winning novel A Fable, on the plaster walls of his office. | |
Eudora Welty | Eudora Welty House | 1925–2001 | Jackson 32°19′7.7″N 90°10′13.22″W / 32.318806°N 90.1703389°W / 32.318806; -90.1703389 |
Welty's parents built the house in 1925. This is where she lived here for nearly 80 years, entertained friends and family, worked in her garden and wrote her award winning novels and short stories. |
Missouri
Name | Image | Residence | Years | Coordinates | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Laura Ingalls Wilder | Laura Ingalls Wilder House | 1896–1957 | Mansfield 37°06′06″N 92°33′24″W / 37.10160°N 92.55678°W / 37.10160; -92.55678 |
Wilder wrote the Little House on the Prairie books while living in the house. | ||
Mark Twain | Mark Twain boyhood home | 1844–1853 | Hannibal 39°42′43″N 91°21′28″W / 39.71205°N 91.35786°W / 39.71205; -91.35786 |
Twain's life in Hannibal inspired his writing of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn and Tom Sawyer. | ||
Maya Angelou | Maya Angelou birthplace | 1928-1931 | St. Louis 38°37′22″N 90°13′47″W / 38.62278°N 90.22970°W / 38.62278; -90.22970 |
The birthplace of writer, Maya Angelou. |
Nebraska
Name | Image | Place | Years | Coordinates | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Willa Cather | Willa Cather House | 1883–1890 | Red Cloud 40°5′16″N 98°31′16″W / 40.08778°N 98.52111°W / 40.08778; -98.52111 |
Cather's childhood home. Her first two homes, the Willa Cather Birthplace and Willow Shade are in Virginia. She lived in the Nebrasa home until she left college in 1890. |
New Hamsphire
Name | Image | Residence | Years | Coordinates | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Robert Frost (1) | Robert Frost Farm (Derry, New Hampshire) | 1900–1911 | Derry 42°52′18″N 71°17′42″W / 42.87167°N 71.29500°W / 42.87167; -71.29500 |
Frost wrote the majority of his poems from A Boy's Will and North of Boston in this house. | |
Robert Frost (2) | The Frost Place | 1911-1920 | Franconia 44°12′46″N 71°45′27″W / 44.21278°N 71.75750°W / 44.21278; -71.75750 |
The family lived in the house until 1920 and then spent the next 20 years spending their summers here. |
New Jersey
Name | Image | Place | Years | Coordinates | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Stephen Crane | Stephen Crane house | 1883–1892 | Asbury 40°13′27″N 74°00′24″W / 40.22404°N 74.00679°W / 40.22404; -74.00679 |
Crane began his writing career in this Asbury Park house. | |
Walt Whitman | Walt Whitman House | 1884–1892 | Camden 39°56′33″N 75°7′26″W / 39.94250°N 75.12389°W / 39.94250; -75.12389 |
The only house that Whitman owned. | |
William Carlos Williams | William Carlos Williams House | 1913–1963 | Rutherford 40°49′36″N 74°6′18″W / 40.82667°N 74.10500°W / 40.82667; -74.10500 |
The poet and physician lived and worked in this house for 50 years. |
New York
Name | Image | Residence | Years | Coordinates | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
James Baldwin | James Baldwin residence, New York City | 1965–1987 | New York City 40°46′40″N 73°58′50″W / 40.77764°N 73.98043°W / 40.77764; -73.98043 |
Baldwin bought the building in 1965. He lived in apartment B; his mother lived above him in apartment 1B and his sister lived in apartment 4A. Tony Morrison lived in the building for a short time. | |
Washington Irving | Sunnyside (Tarrytown, New York) | 1835–1859 | Tarrytown 41°02′51.2″N 73°52′11.6″W / 41.047556°N 73.869889°W / 41.047556; -73.869889 |
This is the first home that Irving bought for himself and he lived here until his death in 1859. The house and gardens have been restored to how Irving's home looked the 1850s. | |
Langston Hughes | Langston Hughes House | 1947–1967 | Harlem, New York City 40°48′27″N 73°56′26″W / 40.80745°N 73.94051°W / 40.80745; -73.94051 |
Hughes lived and worked on the top floor of the house. In this house, Hughes wrote Montage of a Dream Deferred and I Wonder as I Wander.The house is currently open for events. | |
James Weldon Johnson | James Weldon Johnson Residence | 1925–1938 | Harlem, New York City 40°48′55″N 73°56′35″W / 40.81528°N 73.94306°W / 40.81528; -73.94306 |
Legendery poet, novelist, songwriter, and civil rights activist. During the Harlem Renaissance, Johnson gained acclaim for his writing on Black culture. | |
Herman Melville | Herman Melville House | 1838–1847 | Lansingburgh 42°46′23″N 73°40′45″W / 42.77306°N 73.67917°W / 42.77306; -73.67917 |
The family moved to this small town and house from New York City after the death of Melville's father in 1832 left the family impoverished. | |
Carson McCullers (2) | Carson McCullers House | 1945–1967 | South Nyack 41°5′9″N 73°55′11″W / 41.08583°N 73.91972°W / 41.08583; -73.91972 |
In this house, McCullers finished The Member of the Wedding and worked on other novels, short stories, plays and poetry. She lived here until her death in 1967. | |
Edna St. Vincent Millay | Steepletop | 1925–1950 | Austerlitz 42°19′17.30″N 73°26′39.15″W / 42.3214722°N 73.4442083°W / 42.3214722; -73.4442083 |
The house is no longer open to the public. | |
Edgar Allan Poe | Edgar Allan Poe Cottage | 1846-1849 | The Bronx, 40°51′55″N 73°53′40″W / 40.86528°N 73.89444°W / 40.86528; -73.89444 | Poe's, wife, Virginia died in the home after a long illness. He wrote Annabel Lee The Cask of Amontillado, The Bells and other poems and short stories here. | |
Mark Twain | Quarry Farm | 1870-1900 | Elmira 42°6′47″N 76°46′56″W / 42.11306°N 76.78222°W / 42.11306; -76.78222 |
Twain's family visited his wife's family home every summer for 30 years. Three of his daughters were born here. Today, it is used as a retreat for Mark Twain scholars. years. T | |
Walt Whitman | Walt Whitman Birthplace | 1819–1824 | West Hills 40°49′1.38″N 73°24′44.39″W / 40.8170500°N 73.4123306°W / 40.8170500; -73.4123306 |
Whitman's father, who was a carpenter, built the two-story farmhouse in 1816 by hand. |
North Carolina
Name | Image | Place | Years | Coordinates | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Carl Sandburg | Carl Sandburg Home | 1945–1967 | Hendersonville 35°16′17″N 82°26′50″W / 35.27145°N 82.44723°W / 35.27145; -82.44723 |
Sandburg moved here with his family for a quieter environment for his writing. His wife raised, what are now a historic breed of dairy goats on the farm. | |
Thomas Wolfe | Thomas Wolfe House | 1906–1916 | Asheville 35°35′51″N 82°33′03″W / 35.59750°N 82.55083°W / 35.59750; -82.55083 |
Wolfe used the house for the setting of his first novel, Look Homeward Angel. |
Ohio
Name | Image | Residence | Years | Coordinates | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Paul Lawrence Dunbar | Paul Laurence Dunbar House | 1904–1906 | Dayton 39°45′27.6″N 84°13′8.2″W / 39.757667°N 84.218944°W / 39.757667; -84.218944 |
Dunbar bought the house for his mother in 1902, but moved here after he separated from his wife. He suffered from ill health and died in the home in 1906. |
Oregon
Name | Image | Residence | Years | Coordinates | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Zane Grey | Zane Grey Cabin | 1926–1935 | 42°42′06″N 123°48′17″W / 42.70179°N 123.80477°W / 42.70179; -123.80477 | Grey's famous for his popular novels set in the American West. | |
Ken Kesey | Image needed | Kesey Farm | 1965–2001? | Pleasant Hill 43°59′24″N 122°56′08″W / 43.989880°N 122.935692°W / 43.989880; -122.935692 |
Known for his popular novels One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest and Sometimes a Great Notion written in the 1960s. |
Pennsylvania
Name | Image | Residence | Years | Coordinates | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Rachel Carson | Rachel Carson Homestead | 1907–1929 | Springdale 40°32′48″N 79°47′00″W / 40.54663°N 79.78325°W / 40.54663; -79.78325 |
Carson's birthplace and childhood home. Her 1962 book Silent Spring initiated the modern environmentalist movement. | |
Pearl S. Buck (2) | Pearl S. Buck House National Historic Landmark | 1933–late 1960s | Bucks County 40°21′36″N 75°13′11″W / 40.36000°N 75.21972°W / 40.36000; -75.21972 |
Buck was the first American woman to win the Nobel Prize in Literature for her best-selling novel, The Good Earth. | |
John Updike | John Updike Childhood Home | 1932–1945 | Shillington, Pennsylvania 40°18′08″N 75°57′54″W / 40.30222°N 75.96500°W / 40.30222; -75.96500 |
Birthplace and childhood home of American novelist and two-time Pulitzer Prize winner. |
Texas
Name | Image | Residence | Years | Coordinates | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Katherine Ann Porter | Katherine Anne Porter House | 1892–1901 | Kyle 29°59′21″N 97°52′46″W / 29.98917°N 97.87944°W / 29.98917; -97.87944 |
Katherine's father moved his family to his mother's house in Kyle after Katherine's mother died. | |
O. Henry | William Sidney Porter House | 1893–1895 | Austin 30°15′56.5″N 97°44′20.8″W / 30.265694°N 97.739111°W / 30.265694; -97.739111 |
Best selling author of the legendary short-stories The Gift of the Magi and The Ransom of Red Chief. |
Washington D.C.
Name | Image | Residence | Years | Coordinates | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Frederick Douglass | Frederick Douglass National Historic Site | 1877–1895 | Kyle 38°51′48″N 76°59′07″W / 38.86333°N 76.98528°W / 38.86333; -76.98528 |
Douglass wrote the Life and Times of Frederick Douglass in this house, which he named "Cedar Hill". | |
Langston Hughes | ] | Langston Hughes House, Washington D.C. | 1924–1926 | Washington D.C. 30°15′56.5″N 97°44′20.8″W / 30.265694°N 97.739111°W / 30.265694; -97.739111 |
While living in the Italianate row house, "Hughes won his first poetry competition, and gave his first public readings. He got a contract for his first book of poems from Alfred A. Knopf in New York, finished his book manuscript, and published The Weary Blues in February 1926". |
Vermont
Virginia
Name | Image | Residence | Years | Coordinates | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Willa Cather (1) | Willa Cather Birthplace | 1873–1874 | Gore 39°16′3″N 78°19′27″W / 39.26750°N 78.32417°W / 39.26750; -78.32417 |
The Pulitzer-prize winning author was born in her grandmother, Rachel Boak's home in 1873. | |
Willa Cather (2) | Willow Shade | 1874–1883 | Winchester 39°16′06.7″N 78°18′28.7″W / 39.268528°N 78.307972°W / 39.268528; -78.307972 |
Cather's family lived in her paternal grandparent's home until they moved moved to Nebraska in 1883. | |
Ellen Glasgow | Ellen Glasgow House | 1890s–1945 | Richmond 37°32′34″N 77°26′42″W / 37.54278°N 77.44500°W / 37.54278; -77.44500 |
Pulitzer prize winning novelist. |
West Virginia
Name | Image | Residence | Years | Coordinates | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pearl S. Buck (1) | Pearl S. Buck Birthplace | Hillsboro 38°8′30″N 80°12′19″W / 38.14167°N 80.20528°W / 38.14167; -80.20528 |
1892 | Birthplace of Pulitzer and Nobel-prize winning autho. Buck's parents were Presbyterian missionaries on furlough in this house when she was born. When Buck was five months old, her parents returned with her to China. |
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