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Edgar Allan Poe
Biography of Edgar Allan Poe
This is a short biography. Unlike many biographies that just seem to go on and
on, I've tried to compose one short enough to read in a single sitting.
Poe's Childhood
Edgar Poe was born in Boston on January 19, 1809. That makes him Capricorn, on
the cusp of Aquarius. His parents were David and Elizabeth Poe. David was born
in Baltimore on July 18, 1784. Elizabeth Arnold came to the U.S. from England in
1796 and married David Poe after her first husband died in 1805. They had three
children, Henry, Edgar, and Rosalie.
Elizabeth Poe died in 1811, when Edgar was 2 years old. She had separated from
her husband and had taken her three kids with her. Henry went to live with his
grandparents while Edgar was adopted by Mr. and Mrs. John Allan and Rosalie was
taken in by another family. John Allan was a successful merchant, so Edgar grew
up in good surroundings and went to good schools.
When Poe was 6, he went to school in England for 5 years. He learned Latin and
French, as well as math and history. He later returned to school in America and
continued his studies. Edgar Allan went to the University of Virginia in 1826.
He was 17. Even though John Allan had plenty of money, he only gave Edgar about
a third of what he needed. Although Edgar had done well in Latin and French, he
started to drink heavily and quickly became in debt. He had to quit school less
than a year later.
Poe in the Army
Edgar Allan had no money, no job skills, and had been shunned by John Allan.
Edgar went to Boston and joined the U.S. Army in 1827. He was 18. He did
reasonably well in the Army and attained the rank of sergeant major. In 1829,
Mrs. Allan died and John Allan tried to be friendly towards Edgar and signed
Edgar's application to West Point.
While waiting to enter West Point, Edgar lived with his grandmother and his
aunt, Mrs. Clemm. Also living there was his brother, Henry, and young cousin,
Virginia. In 1830, Edgar Allan entered West Point as a cadet. He didn't stay
long because John Allan refused to send him any money. It is thought that Edgar
purposely broke the rules and ignored his duties so he would be dismissed.
A Struggling Writer
In 1831, Edgar Allan Poe went to New York City where he had some of his poetry
published. He submitted stories to a number of magazines and they were all
rejected. Poe had no friends, no job, and was in financial trouble. He sent a
letter to John Allan begging for help but none came. John Allan died in 1834 and
did not mention Edgar in his will.
In 1835, Edgar finally got a job as an editor of a newspaper because of a
contest he won with his story, "The
Manuscript Found in a Bottle". Edgar missed Mrs. Clemm and Virginia
and brought them to Richmond to live with him. In 1836, Edgar married his
cousin, Virginia. He was 27 and she was 13. Many sources say Virginia was 14,
but this is incorrect. Virginia Clemm was born on August 22, 1822. They were
married before her 14th birthday, in May of 1836. In case you didn't figure it
out already, Virginia was Virgo.
As the editor for the Southern Literary Messenger, Poe successfully
managed the paper and increased its circulation from 500 to 3500 copies. Despite
this, Poe left the paper in early 1836, complaining of the poor salary. In 1837,
Edgar went to New York. He wrote "The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym" but he
could not find any financial success. He moved to Philadelphia in 1838 where he
wrote "Ligeia"
and "The
Haunted Palace". His first volume of short stories, "Tales of the
Grotesque and Arabesque" was published in 1839. Poe received the copyright and
20 copies of the book, but no money.
Sometime in 1840, Edgar Poe joined George R. Graham as an editor for Graham's
Magazine. During the two years that Poe worked for Graham's, he published
his first detective story, "The
Murders in the Rue Morgue" and challenged readers to send in
cryptograms, which he always solved. During the time Poe was editor, the
circulation of the magazine rose from 5000 to 35,000 copies. Poe left Graham's
in 1842 because he wanted to start his own magazine.
Poe found himself without a regular job once again. He tried to start a magazine
called The Stylus and failed. In 1843, he published some booklets
containing a few of his short stories but they didn't sell well enough. He won a
hundred dollars for his story, "The
Gold Bug" and sold a few other stories to magazines but he barely had
enough money to support his family. Often, Mrs. Clemm had to contribute
financially. In 1844, Poe moved back to New York. Even though "The
Gold Bug" had a circulation of around 300,000 copies, he could barely
make a living.
In 1845, Edgar Poe became an editor at The Broadway Journal. A year
later, the Journal ran out of money and Poe was out of a job again. He and his
family moved to a small cottage near what is now East 192nd Street. Virginia's
health was fading away and Edgar was deeply distressed by it. Virginia died in
1847, 10 days after Edgar's birthday. After losing his wife, Poe collapsed from
stress but gradually returned to health later that year.
Final Days
In June of 1849, Poe left New York and went to Philadelphia, where he visited
his friend John Sartain. Poe left Philadelphia in July and came to Richmond. He
stayed at the Swan Tavern Hotel but joined "The Sons of Temperance" in an effort
to stop drinking. He renewed a boyhood romance with Sarah Royster Shelton and
planned to marry her in October.
On September 27, Poe left Richmond for New York. He went to Philadelphia and
stayed with a friend named James P. Moss. On September 30, he meant to go to New
York but supposedly took the wrong train to Baltimore. On October 3, Poe was
found at Gunner's Hall, a public house at 44 East Lombard Street, and was taken
to the hospital. He lapsed in and out of consciousness but was never able to
explain exactly what happened to him. Edgar Allan Poe died in the hospital on
Sunday, October 7, 1849.
The mystery surrounding Poe's death has led to many myths and urban legends. The
reality is that no one knows for sure what happened during the last few days of
his life. Did Poe die from alcoholism? Was he mugged? Did he have rabies?