Known for titles such as The Sun Also Rises and A Farewell to Arms, American novelist and avid outdoorsman, Ernest Hemingway, visited Sun Valley frequently. Returning time and time again to hunt, fish, write, Hemingway established a permanent residence in the Valley before his death in 1961. Enjoy the beauty of the Wood River Valley as Hemingway once did – grab cocktail at one of his favorite local watering holes, fish the same grounds he once explored, or visit his final resting place at the Ketchum Cemetery.



Sun Valley Lodge

Silver Creek Preserve

Local Watering Holes
Hemingway was known to frequent establishments like the Sawtooth Club and the Pioneer Saloon for cocktails. He would gamble at the Casino (before it became illegal) and dine at his favorite table at Michel’s Christiana. In addition, Hemingway liked to entertain friends and hosted costume parties at Trail Creek Cabin. The Pioneer Saloon displays one of Hemingway’s prized guns that he used when hunting with Purdy on his ranch, a 1953 Winchester Model 21 twelve-gauge shotgun.The Historic Ernest and Mary Hemingway House
Bought by the Hemingways in 1959, Ernest spent his final years in his Ketchum home along the Big Wood River. The house was bequeathed to The Nature Conservancy by Mary Hemingway upon her death in 1986 and, after 30 years of management, changed hands to The Community Library in Ketchum. The estate‘s 14 acres remain private, listed on the National Register of Historic Places, and are now a part of the Library’s larger historic program. Through the efforts of the Library’s Jeanne Rodger Lane Center for Regional History, items in the house were inventoried, catalogued and preserved in perpetuity, including books signed to Ernest Hemingway by such notable authors as Thornton Wilder and Archibald MacLeish, as well as Mary Hemingway’s collection of evening gowns, which still hang in her art-deco-inspired closet. The Library also initiated significant renovations to the house, and the lower level now hosts the Writer-in-Residence at the Hemingway House program to offer authors, dramatists, scholars, and artists time, inspiration, and space to create new works. The house is closed to the public in an effort to preserve the historic building and its artifacts, and to respect the privacy of the neighbors. While the Library asks that you respect this designation, many items from the historic Hemingway House are made accessible to the public through exhibits at the Library and the Wood River Museum of History and Culture, as well as through research requests. Boise State State Radio – NPR did a great piece on the Hemingway House that is well worth a listen for a broader perspective. Check it out here.Final Resting Place


Hemingway Memorial

“Best of all he loved the fall The leaves yellow on the cottonwoods Leaves floating on the trout streams And above the hills The high blue windless skies Now he will be a part of them forever”
The Community Library and Wood River Museum of History and Culture

