Each spring, the Mystery Writers of America present the Edgar Awards, the
most prestigious award a mystery writer can receive. This award is, fittingly, named after Edgar
Allan Poe, the father of the modern detective story (The
Murders in the Rue Morgue, The Gold Bug). It is
even more fitting that Poe’s untimely death remains one of history’s great
unsolved mysteries.
Poe was born in Boston in 1809 but was orphaned at an early age. A Richmond couple became his foster parents
and Poe spent his youth in Richmond, finally going off to college at the
University of Virginia. Young Poe, now
eighteen, incurred gambling debts and quarreled with his foster father. He
dropped out of the University of Virginia and joined the United States Army
under an assumed name. This didn’t work
out either. In 1829, Edgar Allan Poe
announced that he would make his way in the world by becoming a poet and
writer. Poe became the first American
writer to earn a living (a very modest living) through writing alone.
On September 27, 1849 Edgar Allan Poe left
Richmond bound for Philadelphia where he had been commissioned to edit a
collection of poems. Poe may never have made it to Philadelphia, and he
definitely did not make it to New York to escort his aunt back to Richmond for
his impending wedding. On October 3,
1849 one Joseph Walker, an employee of the Baltimore
Sun, found Poe lying in a Baltimore gutter.
Poe was never to leave Baltimore.
The Poe Museum in Richmond, the repository of many of Poe’s greatest
literary works, tells us that the writer was found, “semiconscious and dressed
in cheap, ill-fitting clothes so unlike Poe’s usual mode of dress that many
believe that Poe’s own clothing had been stolen.” Edgar Allan Poe remained incoherent, gripped
by delirium and hallucinations, unable to explain how he had come to be found
in Baltimore, senseless on the streets,
in dirty clothes not his own. Poe died
on the night of October 7, 1849, calling out for “Reynolds”. The identity of the mysterious Reynolds
remains unknown.
For over one hundred and fifty years people
have speculated on the cause of Poe’s death.
Numerous theories have been put forward, including: he died of a beating
(1857), he died of epilepsy (1875), he drank himself to death (1921), he died
of heart disease (1926), he died of toxic poisoning (1970), he died of hypoglycemia (1979),
he died of diabetes (1977), he died of rabies (1996), he
was murdered (1998). Other theories
proclaim he died of a brain tumor, or from heavy metal poisoning, or from the
flu.
The
most popular theory is that Poe died as a result of a practice called
“cooping.” Cooping was a form of voter
fraud practiced in the 19th century.
Innocent people were snatched off the streets and imprisoned in a room
called “the coop”, where they were fed drugs and alcohol, to gain their silence
and complicity in a scheme whereby they would vote multiple times in the same
election. The uncooperative would be
beaten into submission. Sometimes they
were killed. Election fraud is a high
stakes game. The now compliant victims
were forced to change clothes between casting votes and were often forced to
wear wigs and fake beards so that election officials would not recognize them
at the polls.
There is circumstantial evidence that indicates that Poe may have run
afoul of such a scheme. Baltimore
elections were notoriously violent and corrupt in 1840. An election for sheriff was going on at the
time. Poe was found on the street on
Election Day near Ryan’s Fourth Ward Polls which was both a bar and a place
where votes were cast. Is it possible
that Edgar Allan Poe was kidnapped, drugged and beaten to death in a voter
fraud conspiracy? Perhaps, but the
theory still doesn’t explain how Poe got the one hundred miles from
Philadelphia to Baltimore. Surely, it
would have been easier for the conspirators to pluck someone off the streets of
Baltimore itself.
Another
theory, put forth by writer John E. Walsh in 2000, suggests a more personal
reason for Poe’s predicament, one that involved a lady. Sarah Royster was the teenage sweetheart of
Edgar Allan Poe. Sarah’s father did not
approve of Poe and put an end to the relationship while Poe was at the
University of Virginia. Sarah married a
very wealthy man named Alexander Shelton and enjoyed a happy marriage until
Shelton’s death in 1844. In 1848, Edgar
Allan Poe came back into Sarah’s life. Sarah attended Poe's lectures in Richmond, and by September
1849 the couple are thought to have had an understanding and were on the verge
of marriage. Once again, Sarah’s family
did not approve, perhaps thinking that Poe was a fortune hunter. John Walsh argues that Poe was in
Philadelphia when he was confronted by Sarah’s three brothers who roughly
warned him against trying to marry their sister. A frightened Poe, wanting no further
encounters with the brothers, disguised himself (this accounts for the shoddy
wardrobe in which Poe was found) and headed back to Richmond to marry
Sarah. The brothers intercepted Poe in
Baltimore, savagely beat him, and left him in the gutter. He subsequently died. Possible?
Perhaps, but we may never know the truth.
Edgar Allan
Poe was buried in Baltimore. An imposing
grave monument was dedicated to Poe on November 17, 1875. Beginning in January 1949 and continuing
until January 19, 2009 (the two hundredth anniversary of Poe’s birth) a still
unidentified stranger entered the cemetery on the night of January 19 and left
a partial bottle of cognac and three roses on Poe’s grave. Who was “the Poe
Toaster”? Yet another unsolved mystery.
1 comment:
I still believe that in spite the injury... Poe survived his gastly ordeal in Baltimore. In "Defence of Poe", written by Dr. John Moran, he gives important clues in what would be today called "Witness Protection" and was spirited away and assumed another identity... probably reverting to his 'Edgar Perry'Secret Alias.
Dr. Moran's story as a witness seems supportive in the book "Israfel", by Harvey Allan... where in his book, he gives accounts of witnesses that saw Poe in his travels, before his Alledged Abduction and Cooping in Baltimore.
From what I researched... there was a very cheap drug that was used at the time called "Datura". It was extracted from the Jimson Weed. It was a form of truth serum that left you delirious and in a hypnotic fog.
In overdose with cheap alcohol... it can be fatal.
In my opinion... Poe was lucky to survive.
What happened to Poe after his ordeal is hinted by Dr. Moran. In my research of Historic Real Estate records of Fordham Village... Northeast of The Poe Cottage, there was another small cottage that was owned by 'Clemm', that was recorded to about 1875. It suggests that Poe's Mother-In-Law, Maria Poe-Clemm lived there. In the late 1880's 1890's a set of houses were built and one of them was owned by a Man named 'Mr. Perry' and he died later in his 90's.
Today "The Clemm Cottage" was rediscovered but tragically destroyed in the mid-1970's and fourtunately "The Perry House Still exists along with "The Poe Cottage". If Dr. Moran's account is correct... it is possible that Poe or Perry, lived to about 1875-1880 and Mr. Perry and his Sister, might have been related to both Poe and Clemm in Fordham Village.
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