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Edgar Poe was born in 1809 in Boston, but
he considered Richmond his home, and called himself "a
Virginian." It was in Richmond that Poe grew up, married,
and first gained a national literary reputation. Many of the
places in Richmond associated with Poe have been lost, but
several still remain.
Poe's natural parents, David and Elizabeth
Arnold Poe, both actors, were employed by Mr. Placide's Theatre
Company in Boston. They had been married in Richmond while
on tour here in 1806. On December 8, 1811, while again in
Richmond, Elizabeth Arnold Poe died. The two children who
were with her Edgar, not quite three, and Rosalie, only eleven
months old, were taken in by Richmond families - Edgar by
John and Frances Valentine Allan and Rosalie by William and
Jane Scott MacKenzie. Mr. Allan was a partner in the merchant
firm Ellis and Allan. At this time, Allan and his wife were
living in quarters located above the firm's offices at Thirteenth
and East Main Streets. Poe adopted the middle name "Allan"
from his Richmond family.
Poe's mother, Elizabeth, was buried in the
churchyard of St. John's Espicopal Church where her memorial
stone may be seen. St. John's is the oldest church in Richmond
and is famous as the site of Patrick Henry's rousing "liberty
or death" oration shortly before the Revolutionary War.
The Richmond Theatre where Edgar Poe's mother
had performed burned to the ground on December 26,1811, only
eighteen days after her death. The fire took the lives of
many Richmonders including the Governor of Virginia, George
Smith and his wife. At the site of the tragedy on East Broad
Street, Monumental Episcopal Church was erected as a memorial
to the victims. The Allans maintained pew number 80 in the
church where young Edgar worshipped with his Richmond family.
Today, Monumental Church is owned by the Historic Richmond
Foundation.
All of the Allan homes where Poe grew up
have now disappeared; however, a photograph of Moldavia, his
last home in Richmond, does exist. It shows a fine, large
home with a double portico. John Allan bought the house in
1825, and Edgar lived there before entering the University
of Virginia in 1826. Moldavia was located at Fifth and Main
Streets. Across the street lived the Royster family with their
daughter Elmira.
Elmira was Edgar's teenage sweetheart; however,
their relationship was broken off by disapproving parents.
She subsequently married a Mr. Shelton, whose prospects seemed,
at least to her parents, more promising than those of Poe.
Their romance blossomed again, however, in the last years
of Poe's life, when he, after his wife's death, found himself
once more in Richmond. The Elmira Shelton house, where Poe
visited in 1848 and 1849, still stands at 2407 East Grace
Street. It is privately owned.
Poe's boyhood in Richmond can be recalled
in one of his finest poems, "To Helen," which was
inspired by Jane Stith Craig Stanard, the mother of his schoolmate,
Robert Stanard. It was she who praised and encouraged Poe's
first literary efforts, and he repaid her in full with his
stirring lines: "To the glory that was Greece And the
grandeur that was Rome." Her girlhood home, the Stith
house still stands at the corner of Nineteenth and East Grace
Streets.
After a quarrel with John Allan in 1826,
Poe left the University of Virginia and Richmond and headed
north to Boston, where in 1827, he published his first book,
Tamerlane and Other Poems. The poems reflect his rift with
his Richmond family and, in part at least, must have been
composed while he was still in Virginia. After a two-year
stint in the army, a few months at the Military Academy at
West Point, and the publication in 1829 of a second volume
of poems, Al Aaraaf, Tamerlane and Minor Poems, Poe moved
to Baltimore to live with his aunt Maria Clemm and her son
and daughter, Virginia. Here, Poe published a number of short
stories and won first prize in a literary contest with one
titled "MS Found in a Bottle." His success in the
contest led to a job opportunity which brought him back to
Richmond in 1835 as an assistant editor on the Southern Literary
Messenger.
The Southern Literary Messenger had its
offices at Fifteenth and Main Streets; the building was demolished
in 1915, but materials from it were used to construct the
first memorial to Poe in Richmond, the Poe Shrine and garden,
which along with the Old Stone House form the central portion
of the present Poe Museum complex at 1914-16 East Main Street.
While Poe worked at the Messenger from August 1835 to January
1837, he lived at Mrs. Yarrington's boarding house on Bank
Street near Capitol Square. Mrs. Clemm and Virginia lived
with him there, and it was at Mrs. Yarrington's that Poe and
his young cousin Virginia were married on May 16,1836.
While editing the Southern Literary Messenger,
Poe wrote his only novel, The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym.
The first part of the novel was published in the Messenger
in Richmond. Poe also composed the play, Politian in Richmond.
He gained recognition as a critic, poet and writer of tales
while living in Richmond and editing the young magazine.
Poe left the Messenger hoping to start his
own literary journal. Again, the North beckoned as the most
propitious place for such an undertaking. He moved to Philadelphia
and then to New York, making his living by editorial work
on such publications as Burton's Gentleman's Magazine, Graham's
Magazine, the New York Evening Mirror and the Broadway Journal.
Unfortunately, Poe never succeeded as owner/editor of his
own publication.
After his wife's death on January 30, 1847,
Poe returned to Richmond briefly in 1848 and again in 1849.
During the last visit to Richmond, Poe lectured on "The
Poetic Principle," and gave readings of "The Raven,"
the poem which had spread his fame in Europe as well as in
America. Poe lived at that time at the Swan Tavern, a boarding
house on Broad Street. He lectured at the venerable Exchange
Hotel. Poe also visited old friends in Richmond; among them
was the MacKenzie family who lived at Duncan Lodge on West
Broad Street. Poe also visited the Tally family who lived
at Talavera at 2315 West Grace Street. Of the places mentioned
here, only Talavera survives, which is privately owned. Tradition
says that it was at Talavera that Poe gave his last reading
of "The Raven" on September 25, 1849. Two days later,
Poe left Richmond for the last time. He died in Baltimore
on October 7, 1849.
 
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