The ice palace referenced in the story is based on one that appeared at the 1887
St. Paul,
Minnesota, Winter Carnival. A native of the city, Fitzgerald probably heard of the structure during his childhood. The ice labyrinth contained in the bottom floor of the palace appeared as part of the 1888 Ice Palace. F. Scott Fitzgerald traced the origins of the story to events that occurred in 1920. The first was the despairing remark of an unidentified girl he met in
St. Paul, Minnesota: The second was an exchange he had with his future spouse,
Zelda Sayre, while visiting
Montgomery, Alabama. During the early months of their courtship, Zelda and Scott strolled through the Confederate Cemetery at
Oakwood Cemetery. While walking past the headstones, Scott ostensibly failed to show sufficient reverence, and Zelda informed Scott that he would never understand how she felt about the Confederate dead. Scott wrote: Scott drew on Zelda's intense feelings about the
Confederate States of America and the South for his short story about a Southern girl who becomes lost in an ice maze while visiting a northern town. Whereas F. Scott Fitzgerald denigrated his family's Confederate relatives such as
Mary Surratt and mocked the Sayre family's intense devotion to the Confederacy, Zelda described herself as "a
Typhoid Mary of Confederate tradition". Friction between Zelda and Scott regarding the South resurfaced in February 1921 during Zelda's pregnancy. She requested that the child be born on Southern soil in Alabama, but Fitzgerald refused. Zelda wrote to a friend: "Scott's changed... He used... to say he loved the South, but now he wants to get as far away from it as he can." To her dismay, Scott insisted upon having their baby on northern soil in St. Paul. == Critical analysis ==