Opinion editor’s note: Editorials represent the opinions of the Minnesota Star Tribune Editorial Board, which operates independently from the newsroom.
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A 37-year-old St. Paul man has been charged with the theft of a bronze statue of F. Scott Fitzgerald that was at the former site of St. Paul Academy.
But while it was possible to separate the statue from its base, it’s impossible to separate Fitzgerald from his base in St. Paul.
Minnesota’s capital “provided the fire that forged Fitzgerald into the world-famous author he became,” David Page, author of “F. Scott Fitzgerald in Minnesota: The Writer and his Friends at Home,” said via email. Fitzgerald’s writing while he was at SPA and his playwriting for work performed at the White Bear Yacht Club and other venues “gave him the encouragement he needed to think of himself as a budding artist.”
Other notable landmarks, according to Ava Diaz, communications and marketing manager at Visit St. Paul, include Fitzgerald’s Laurel Avenue birthplace and the Summit Avenue brownstone where he wrote “This Side of Paradise.”
In some ways, young Fitzgerald felt he himself was on the other side of paradise, said Jackson Bryer, the co-founder and current president of the F. Scott Fitzgerald Society.
Bryer, a University of Maryland English professor emeritus, said that “across the street from him were the backyards of some of St. Paul’s most successful citizens, and yet he wasn’t on the street.”