F.
Scott Fitzgerald's Gravesite
September 2000
F. Scott Fitzgerald
never lived in Rockville. So why is he buried in Rockville?
Young
Scott regularly visited his father's relatives at "Locust
Grove" in Montgomery County, returning home fascinated with
family and Civil War stories. The seven-year-old was a "ribbon
holder" at his cousin Cecilia Delihant's home wedding at
Randolph Station, south of Rockville, on April 24, 1903.
While intervening
years took Fitzgerald around the world, Maryland never left his
heart. People, places, and experiences in Rockville found their way
into his writings. The author's life-long connection to Rockville
was maintained through correspondence, family ties and visits and,
in 1940, as his final resting place.
As an adult
Fitzgerald may have visited Rockville more often than research has
uncovered. We do know that he returned from Paris to attend his
father's funeral at Saint Mary's Church in 1931. A passage in Tender
is the Night (1934) described his feelings:
"It
was very friendly leaving him there with all his relations around
him...
Dick had no more ties here now and did not believe he would come
back...
'Good-by, my father-good-by, all my fathers."
Fitzgerald died at
age 44 on December 21, 1940, in Hollywood, California. On December
27 a small group of family and friends attended the simple service
specified in his will. They then accompanied him from Pumphrey's
Funeral Home in Bethesda, in the rain, to Rockville Cemetery on
Baltimore Road. After his wife, Zelda, died in a sanitarium fire on
March 11, 1948, she was buried with him beneath a common headstone.
F. Scott Fitzgerald
had once written that, "I wouldn't mind a bit if in a few years
Zelda and I could snuggle up together under a stone in some
graveyard. That is really a happy thought, and not melancholy at
all."
The Women's Club of
Rockville was instrumental in the Fitzgeralds' move to Saint Mary's
Cemetery on Veirs Mill Road. As a result of an expanded project to
beautify the original gravesite, the Club approached Scott and
Zelda's only child, Frances "Scottie" Fitzgerald Lanahan
Smith, who responded positively to their suggestion to unite her
parents with Fitzgerald family members in Saint Mary's. Historic
designation of the church was a major factor in Scottie Fitzgerald's
decision to reinter her parents in the cemetery there. This was
accomplished on November 7, 1975, with a ceremony organized by the
Women's Club, "Tender is the Day."
Scottie visited
Monsignor Adam Kostick in late 1985 with the request that she be
buried near her parents. She followed with a letter in June, which
was received on June 18, 1986, just prior to her funeral service at
Saint Mary's Chapel. The church and cemetery are part of a National
Register-listed historic site.
Today, 15 members of
the family-Fitzgeralds, Delihants, Scotts, and Robertsons-rest in
peace at historic Saint Mary's Cemetery.
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