Following in Hemingway’s Northern Michigan Footsteps
July 21, 2025
Most have at least heard of Pulitzer and Nobel Prize-winning author Ernest Hemingway, but some may be surprised that he and his family – parents Clarence and Grace, along with his five siblings – spent their summers at their cottage Windemere on Walloon Lake.
Hailing from Oak Park, Illinois, the Hemingways made their annual summer pilgrimage north via steamer from Chicago to Harbor Springs, when they would board the first of three trains that would transport them through Bay View, Petoskey, and Clarion to Walloon Lake, where they would travel again by boat (and then horse-drawn wagon) to finally arrive at their cottage.
Summers in northern Michigan were magical for Ernest. It was here that his passion for the outdoors was fostered, where his love of writing blossomed and where he set many of his short stories – specifically The Nick Adams Stories and Torrents of Spring.
The Michigan Hemingway Society has recently updated its self-guided Michigan Hemingway Tour map of sites throughout Bay View, Petoskey, Horton Bay, Walloon Lake, and the Pigeon River area near Gaylord. Most sites are identified by a 15-inch by 15-inch bronze historical plaque printed with a brief history.
Petoskey claims the majority of these historic sites, including the Pere Marquette Railroad Station (currently the Little Traverse History Museum near the marina, which features several Hemingway artifacts on display) and the Grand Rapids & Indiana Railroad Station (on the corner of Bay and Lewis Streets).
About the author: Dianna Stampfler is the president of Promote Michigan and the author of the best-selling books “Michigan’s Haunted Lighthouses” and “Death & Lighthouses on the Great Lakes.” She loves traveling around the Great Lakes state, with Hemingway country being among her favorite destinations.
Updated: 7/21/2025
- The Perry Hotel – where Ernest stayed in 1916 after hiking north from Oak Park, paying just 75-cents for his room
- The Annex – now known as City Park Grill
- McCarthy’s Barber Shop at 309 Howard Street (now Ruff Life Pet Outfitters) – where Hemingway went for a shave, haircut and likely for use of the public bathhouse in the basement
- Jesperson’s Restaurant (now High Five Spirits); Carnegie Library Building (451 E. Mitchell Street) – where he spoke to locals about his time as an American ambulance driver in Italy during World War I
- Potter’s Rooming House (602 State St., now a private home), where he spent the winter of 1919-1920 to focus on his writing
- Braun Hotel at 210 Howard Street – above Mettlers American Mercantile – was added in 2020 and is a noted site from the 1926 book Torrents of Spring
About the author: Dianna Stampfler is the president of Promote Michigan and the author of the best-selling books “Michigan’s Haunted Lighthouses” and “Death & Lighthouses on the Great Lakes.” She loves traveling around the Great Lakes state, with Hemingway country being among her favorite destinations.
Updated: 7/21/2025





