Showing posts with label timeline. Show all posts
Showing posts with label timeline. Show all posts

Monday, January 31, 2011

A Well-Cultured Individual

Fitzgerald moved quite a lot. He spent a lot of time traveling and living in Europe with his family, as well as at home in the United States. Here, I have a map that shows where Fitzgerald lived and when:





Credit-Cameron McAllister: map-maker extraordinaire (I found all the information on eNotes, he just made it look really pretty)


Sunday, January 30, 2011

F. Scott Fitzgerald and the World He Lived In (A Timeline)

Here, I will show you some important events in Fitzgerald's life as they coincided with events in history. Hopefully it will be as interesting to you all as it is to me.
  • September 1896: Fitzgerald born; Queen Victoria surpasses her grandfather King George III as the longest reigning monarch in British history.
  • September 1908: Fitzgerald begins school at St. Paul Academy; the first production of the Ford Model T automobile was built.
  • October 1909: "The Mystery of the Raymond Mortgage" is Fitzgerald's first ever published work; Comte de Lambert of France sets airplane altitude record of 300 m
  • August 1911: Fitzgerald's first play, "The Girl from Lazy J" is produced by the Elizabethan Dramatic Club; Vincenzo Perugia steals Mona Lisa from Louvre, Paris (recovered in 1913)
  • September 1913: Fitzgerald enters Princeton University as a member of the class of 1917; 1st aerobatic maneuver, sustained inverted flight, performed in France
  • December 1914: Fitzgerald's first Princeton Triangle Club show "Fie! Fie! Fi-Fi!", for which he wrote book and lyrics, produced; legendary/unofficial "Christmas Truce" takes place (Brits & Germans)
  • January 1915: Fitzgerald meets Ginerva King, a debutante, with whom he becomes romantically involved; earthquake in Avezzano, Italy kills 29,800; Japan claims economic control of China; Alexander Graham Bell in NY calls Thomas Watson in SF
  • June 1915: "The Ordeal" (re-named "Benediction") is Fitzgerald's first short story published in the "Nassau Literary Magazine"; the Turks invade Armenia; 78,000 ANZAC troops land at Gallipoli; Italy secretly signes Pact of London with Britain, France & Russia
  • November 1915: Fitzgerald drops out of Princeton for the remainder of his junior year; Theodore W. Richards is 1st American to win Nobel Prize in chemistry
  • September 1916: Fitzgerald returns to Princeton as a member of the class of 1918; Manfred von Richthofen ("The Red Baron"), a flying ace of the German Luftstreitkräfte, wins his first aerial combat near Cambrai, France; John D. Rockefeller becomes the first billionaire
  • October 1917: Fitzgerald commissioned as a second lieutenant in US infantry; 1st British bombing of Germany; 1st Americans to see action on front lines of WWI; in Russia, Bolsheviks, led by Vladimir Lenin, seize power
  • November 1917: Fitzgerald reports to Fort Leavenworth, Kansas and begins work on "The Romantic Egotist, a novel; 1st US soldiers are killed in combat; NY allows women to vote; October Revolution in Russia, Lenin seizes power
  • February 1918: While on leave, Fitzgerald visits Princeton, finishes "The Romantic Egotist", and submits it to Shane Leslie who later submitted it to Charles Scribner's Sons; Britain grants women (30 & over) vote; first victory of Red Army over the Kaiser's German troops near Narva and Pskov
  • June 1918: Fitzgerald arrives at Camp Sheridan, near Montgomery; Battle of Belleau Wood, 1st US victory of WW I
  • July 1918: Fitzgerald meets Zelda at a country-club dance; Russian Soviet Federal Socialist Republic forms
  • August 1918: "Romantic Egotist" rejected by Scibner's (they also decline the revised version in October); Bolshevik revolutionary leader, Moisei Uritsky, is assassinated
  • October 1918: Fitzgerald's regiment reports to Camp Mills, Long Island; Arab forces, under T. E. Lawrence (aka "Lawrence of Arabia"), capture Damascus; forest fire in Minnesota & Northern Wisconsin kills about 800; Spanish flu-virus kills 21,000 in US in 1 week
  • November 1918: War is over before Fitzgerald's regiment is ever sent overseas. Regiment returns to Camp Sheridan; Germany surrenders ending WWI, Allies & Germany sign armistice
  • February 1919: Fitzgerald is informally engaged to Zelda. Goes to New York, works for Barron Collier advertising agency, and tries unsuccessfully to break into the magazine market; League of Nations 1st meeting; Fascist Party forms in Italy by Benito Mussolini
  • June 1919: Zelda breaks engagement; 1st nonstop Atlantic flight (Alcock & Brown) lands in Ireland; Germany ends incorporation of Austria
  • July 1919: Fitzgerald returns to St. Paul and finishes "The Romantic Egotist" while living with his parents
  • September 1919: "Babes in Woods" is Fitzgerald's first story to be sold to a magazine ("The Smart Set"); Scribner's accepts his rewritten novel, now titled "This Side of Paradise"; Communist Party of America organizes in Chicago; President Woodrow Wilson is paralyzed by a stroke
  • November 1919: Fitzgerald becomes a client of Harold Ober at the Reynold's literary agency; US Senate rejects (55-39) Treaty of Versailles & League of Nations
  • January 1920: Fitzgerald visits Zelda in Montgomery and their engagement resumes; 18th Amendment, prohibition, goes into effect (repealed in 1933); Walt Disney starts 1st job as an artist
  • March 1920: "This Side of Paradise" is published
  • April 1920: Fitzgerald and Zelda marry; American Professional Football Association (NFL) forms
  • May 1920: The Fitzgerald's live in Westport, Connecticut, where he begins work on "The Beautiful and the Damned"; President Wilson makes Communist Labor Party illegal
  • September 1920: "Flappers and Philosophers", Fitzgerald's first collection of short stories is published; US Air Mail service begins
  • October 1921: Fitzgerald's daughter Scottie is born; Green Bay Packers play 1st NFL game, 7-6 win over Minneapolis
  • March 1922: "The Beautiful and the Damned" is published; "Nosferatu" premieres in Berlin; British court sentences Mahatma Gandhi to 6 years in prison
  • September 1922: "Tales of the Jazz Age", Fitzgerald's second set of short stories, is published; Mussolini ask Vatican for support of fascist party program
  • June 1924: The Fitzgerald's take residence at Villa Marie in St. Raphael, France; 1st political convention broadcast on radio (Republicans at Cleveland); Ziegfeld Follies opens on Broadway
  • Summer-Fall 1924: Fitzgerald completes and revises first draft of "The Great Gatsby"
  • April 1925: "The Great Gatsby" is published
  • May 1925: Fitzgerald meets Hemingway at the Dingo bar in Montparnasse
  • February 1926: Owen Davis's play version of "The Great Gatsby" opens on Broadway. The play had a successful run of 113 performances and was the basis for the 1926 silent film; "All the Sad Young Men", Fitzgerald's third collection of short stories, is published; 3 men dance Charleston for 22 hours; Walt Disney Studios forms
  • April 1930: Zelda suffers first emotional breakdown. She is hospitalized at Malmaison Clinic outside Paris; The Chrysler Building in New York City officially opens
  • June 1930: Zelda becomes patient at Pragins Clinic at Nyon, Switzerland; Chicago Tribune reporter Jake Lingle is killed during rush hour at the Illinois Central train station by the Leo Vincent Brothers, allegedly over a $100,000 USD gambling debt owed to Al Capone
  • September 1931: Zelda is released from Pragins. The Fitzgeralds return permanently to the US and take up residence in Montgomery; 1st LP record demonstrated (RCA Victor, NYC), venture failed
  • January 1932: The Fitzgerald's travel to St. Petersburg, Florida where Zelda suffers a second emotional collapse; Hattie W. Caraway elected 1st woman senator
  • February 1932: Zelda becomes a patient of Phipps Psychiatric Clinic at John Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore; Al Capone sent to prison; immigrant Adolf Hitler gets German citizenship
  • February 1934: Zelda suffers third breakdown
  • April 1934: "Tender is the Night" is published; Bonnie & Clyde kill 2 police officers; 418 Lutheran ministers arrested in Germany; Shirley Temple appears in her 1st movie, "Stand Up & Cheer"
  • March 1935: "Taps at Reveille", Fitzgerald's fourth and final short story collection, is published; Adolf Hitler announces the creation of a new air force; Hitler orders German rearmament, violating Versailles Treaty
  • March 1937: "Trouble", Fitzgerald's last story in the "Saturday Evening Post" is published; 1st permanent automobile license plates issued; 1st blood bank forms
  • July 1937: Fitzgerald receives six-month contract with MGM and meets Sheilah Graham, with whom he becomes romantically involved; Amelia Earhart & Fred Noonan disappear over Pacific Ocean; Japanese & Chinese troops clash, (Marco Polo Bridge), becomes WWII
  • December 1937: Fitzgerald's MGM contract renewed for one year; 1st feature-length color & sound cartoon premieres (Snow White); Lincoln Tunnel (NYC) opens to traffic
  • December 1938: Fitzgerald's MGM contract is not renewed; French/German non-attack treaty drawn (Ribbentrop-Bonnet Pact)
  • July 1939: Fitzgerald breaks with long-time agent Harold Ober; German Nazi's close last Jewish enterprises; Frank Sinatra made his recording debut
  • December 1940: Fitzgerald has heart attack and dies at Sheilah Graham's apartment in Hollywood; Germany begins dropping incendiary bombs on London
  • October 1941: "The Last Tycoon, Fitzgerald's unfinished last novel, is published by Scribners; Germans launch attack on Moscow; 16,000 Jews massacred in Odessa, Ukraine; Mount Rushmore is completed
  • March 1948: Zelda Fitzgerald dies in a fire at Highland Hospital; US rocket flies record 4800 KPH to 126k height
  • November 1950: Scottie Fitzgerald Lanahan donates the Fitzgerald papers to Princeton University


Works cited:
"Fitzgerald, F. Scott - Introduction." Contemporary Literary Criticism. Ed. Matthew J. Bruccoli and Richard Layman. Vol. lm1. Gale Cengage, 2000.eNotes.com. 2006. 31 Jan, 2011 <http://www.enotes.com/contemporary-literary-criticism/
f-scott-fitzgerald/introduction>



"Browse Dates by Year." HistoryOrb.com - Articles, Birthdays & Today in History. Web. 30 Jan. 2011 <http://www.historyorb.com/dates-by-year.php>.