Puneet Varma (Editor)

F. Scott Fitzgerald House

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Built
  
1889

Designated NHL
  
November 11, 1971

Area
  
809.4 m²

Architectural style
  
Victorian architecture

NRHP Reference #
  
71000440

Opened
  
1889

Phone
  
+1 651-224-7811

Added to NRHP
  
11 November 1971

F. Scott Fitzgerald House

Location
  
599 Summit Avenue Saint Paul, Minnesota

Part of
  
Historic Hill District (#76001067)

Address
  
599 Summit Ave, St Paul, MN 55102, USA

Architects
  
Clarence H. Johnston Sr., William H. Willcox

Similar
  
James J Hill House, Summit Avenue, Frank B Kellogg House, Sinclair Lewis Boyhood, Fitzgerald Theater

F scott fitzgerald house and museum in montgomery al


The F. Scott Fitzgerald House, also known as Summit Terrace, in Saint Paul, Minnesota, United States, is part of a rowhouse designed by William H. Willcox and Clarence H. Johnston, Sr. The house, at 599 Summit Avenue, is listed as a National Historic Landmark for its association with author F. Scott Fitzgerald. The design of the rowhouse was called the "New York Style", where each unit was given a distinctive character similar to rowhouses in eastern cities. Architecture critic Larry Millett describes it as "A brownstone row house that leaves no Victorian style unaccounted for, although the general flavor is Romanesque Revival." The Fitzgerald house is a brownstone two bays wide, with a polygonal two-story window bay on the right, and the entrance, recessed under a round arch that is flush with the bay front, on the left. At the mansarded roof level there is a gable with two round-arch windows and decorative finials.

Fitzgerald's parents, Edward and Mollie, moved back to St. Paul in 1914 while F. Scott Fitzgerald was a student at Princeton University. They lived in the unit at 593 Summit Avenue for a while, then moved to the 599 Summit Avenue unit in 1918. In July and August 1919, Fitzgerald rewrote the manuscript that became his first novel, This Side of Paradise. He lived here until January 1920, writing short stories, and then moved to New Orleans. Of the several places the Fitzgeralds lived, this one is most closely associated with his literary fame, and typifies the environments of some of his later works.

It was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1971. It is also a contributing property to the Historic Hill District, listed in 1976.

F. Scott Fitzgerald was noted for disliking Summit Avenue, stating that Summit Avenue is “a mausoleum of American architectural monstrosities.”

References

F. Scott Fitzgerald House Wikipedia