"Edgar Allan Poe National Historic Site" by NPS / Victoria Stauffenberg , public domain
Edgar Allan PoeBrochure |
Official Brochure of Edgar Allan Poe National Historic Site (NHS) in Pennsylvania. Published by the National Park Service (NPS).
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Edgar Allan Poe
National Historic Site
Pennsylvania
National Park Service
U.S. Department of the Interior
The Life of a Poet
Edgar Poe was born to itinerant actors in
Boston in 1809. His mother Elizabeth Arnold
Poe died when Edgar was two, by which time
his father, David Poe, had disappeared. He
was raised as a foster child by Frances Allan
and her husband John Allan, a tobacco exporter of Richmond. Poe spent his youth
between the ages of six and eleven with the
Allans in England where he attended boarding school. Returning to Richmond, Poe
later enrolled for a year at the University of
Virginia. His tenure was marked by distinction in Latin and French and ended with the
withdrawal of Allan's support due to Poe's
gambling debts.
J o h n Allan.
Poe's toster father
At eighteen, Poe set off for Boston where
he published his first volume of poems. He
subsequently enlisted in the army for two
years. Following a brief reconciliation with
Allan after his foster mother died, he obtained an appointment to West Point. But
Allan soon remarried; Poe lost all hopes of
Allan's support and he left West Point because the service was an inappropriate
career for a young man of little means. Although Poe romanticized his forbears and
pretended to have set off for Greece and
St. Petersburg in some idealized aristocratic
pursuit of freedom during his years in the
army, it is clear that he faced, from age
twenty-two, a life of struggle and poverty.
In 1831, Poe published a new collection of
poems. He appears to have spent most of the
next four years in Baltimore living with his
aunt,MariaClemm, and her daughter.Virginia.
These were difficult times: letters to Allan
indicate Poe feared imprisonment for debt
and mentioned that he was perishing for
want of aid. During this period, Poe was
writing tales and selling them to journals in
Baltimore and Philadelphia.
When he became editor of the Southern
Literary Messenger in Richmond in 1835.
Poe found his vocation: editor, critic and
contributor to a series of journals, each of
which flourished under his guidance. Poe
married Virginia in 1836. With Maria Clemm
Visitor information
The Site
The Edgar Allan Poe National Historic Site was
authorized as a unit of the National Park Service
in 1978. O p e n e d in August of 1980, extensive
research u n c o v e r e d m a n y architectural features
original to Poe's home. The National Park Service has
not furnished the rooms due to the lack of primary
evidence describing their contents d u r i n g Poe's
occupancy.
Please call for hours of operation. Closed Veterans
Day, Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year's Day.
Admission is tree.
Safety Reminder
The Poe House was not built with 21st century visitors
in mind. Please watch your step on uneven surfaces
and on the steep and narrow stairways
Administration
The Park consists of a complex ot three buildings, two
of which serve as a visitor center and entrance to the
site.
This area contains exhibits, an audio-visual
program and a small sales facility.
Ranger-guided
tours of the Poe House begin here.
The Edgar Allan Poe National Historic Site is administered through Independence National Historical Park,
143 S, 3rd St., Philadelphia, PA 19106,
For tour
information you may contact the Poe NHS directly at
(215) 597-8780. For Edgar Allan Poe NHS through
the NPS H o m e Page, http://www.nps.gov/edal/
Groups should contact the Park in advance of their
visit to obtain a reservation. Although picnicking is
allowed on the grounds, there are no indoor picnic
facilities.
Getting There
The Edgar Allan Poe
National Historic Site
is located at 7th and
Spring Garden Sts. in
Philadelphia, just a
tew blocks north of
Center City. When
planning your visit
we urge you to consider mass transit.
Philadelphia is served
by major air, rail, and
bus lines and has an
extensive public transpotation system.
It you arrive by car:
it you arrive in the city by
train or bus, take the
Market-Frankford subway
east to 8th and
Market Streets. Walk
one block east to 7th
Street and take the 847
bus to 7th and Spring
Garden Streets, if you
arrive in the city by
plane, lake the "R-1
Airport Line" train to
Market Street East (8th
and Market Streets) and
proceed as above.
Westbound by car: After
crossing the Ben
Franklin Bridge, stay in
right hand lane and exit
at the red light (this
becomes 7th Street).
Follow 7th Street to
Spring Garden Street.
From the Walt Whitman
Bridge, take exit for
(I-95 North and follow
Northbound instructions,
below.)
8/08
Eastbound: Via I-76 (the
Schuylkill Expressway) Exit onto I-676 East
(toward "Central
Philadelphia") and follow
it to the 8th Street exit.
At the bottom of the exit
ramp proceed straight at
the traffic light. Make a
left at the second traffic
light (this becomes 7lh
Street) and proceed two
blocks to Spring Garden
Street.
Southbound by car: Via
I-95 Use "independence
Hall/Historic Area" exit.
At the bottom of the exit
ramp turn right onto
Callowhill Street. Follow
Callowhill to 7th Street
turn right onto 7th and
proceed to Spring
Garden Slreel.
Northbound by car: Via
1-95 - Exit at "Historic
Area'. At bottom of ramp
turn left at traffic signal
onto Delaware Avenue
(some sections are
named "Columbus Blvd.")
to Spring Garden Street
(about 1.5 miles). Turn
left on Spring Garden
Street and proceed to
7th Street
Poe as he a p p e a r e d in
Graham's Magazine in 1845
they formed a household which, in 1837,
moved from Richmond to New York and
thence to Philadelphia where Poe enjoyed his
most productive and most contented years.
In 1844, they returned to New York where
Poe briefly owned his own journal. It was in
New York that Virginia died of tuberculosis
in 1847.
Following Virginia's death, Poe rapidly disintegrated, returning to Richmond in 1849 still
preoccupied with the goal of his lifetime:
owning his own journal. Setting off for New
York shortly thereafter to visit Mrs. Clemm,
his hopes still high for the future. Poe traveled no farther than Baltimore There he died in
delirium of "acute congestion of the brain"
and was buried near his grandfather in the
Presbyterian cemetery
"My address is 234, North Seventh St. above Spring Garden,
W e S I S i d e . Edgar Alan Poe, 1843.
Exactly how long Poe lived in the small brick
house now connected to 530 North Seventh
St. is unknown. Apparently, he moved into
this house sometime between the fall of 1842
and June of 1843 and left in April 1844. Like
all of Poe's homes, this one was rented. It
may or may not have been furnished when
Poe; his wife, Virginia; his mother-in-law,
Maria Clemm; and their cat, Catterina,
moved in. Whatever furniture they used or
purchased has disappeared without a trace.
The importance of this house lies in its location and its connection to Poe. During the
entire six years (1838-1844) that Poe lived
in Philadelphia, he attained his greatest successes as an editor and critic, and he
published some of his most famous tales,
including, "The Gold Bug," "The Fall of the
House of Usher," "The Tell-Tale Heart," and
"The Murders in the Rue Morgue". Of his
several Philadelphia homes, only this one
survives. It serves as a tangible link with
Poe and his days of greatness in Philadelphia. For this reason, it is fitting that Congress chose this site as our nation's memorial to Edgar Allan Poe.
Poe s Spring Garden home today.
The Writer and His Influence
Edgar Poe has cast a long shadow: he has
probably had a greater influence than any
other American writer Although Poe's tales
and poems range from masterful to ludicrous,
Poe exerted his most significant influence as
a man who understood the temper of his
times, and foreshadowed so much of the
future of literature. His wide-ranging tales
and his broad criticism sought a method for
American literature where none had prevailed. Poe deliberately sought great variety
in his tales. A review of his more than seventy
pieces of fiction testifies not merely to his
range, but also to the significant popular
genres he created or made his own which
today form the staples of American fiction.
Poe's greatest influence comes about in the
murder mystery. He can be said to have invented it when he published The Murders in
the Rue Morgue!' Although murders in fiction
existed before Poe, his preoccupation with
the ingenious solution of the crime established in his tales of ratiocination (the process
of exact thinking) changed the emphasis from
the acts to getting the facts. Poe's cerebral
and eccentric detective Dupin ("the ingenious
are always fanciful and the truly imaginative
never otherwise than analytic") who also
appeared in "The Mystery of Marie Roget"
and "The Purloined Letter" is the identifiable
ancestor of Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes,
Agatha Christie's Hercule Poirot, Erie Stanley Gardner's Perry Mason and all those
other heroes whose minds are "resolvent
and creative."
One popular genre which can be traced back
to Poe. science fiction, was seen more as a
hoax by Poe's contemporaries. Orson Welles'
radio broadcast of a Martian landing is a
later example of the American hoax or tallstory tradition. In "The Unparalleled Adventure of One Hans Pfaall" in which Poe attempted an ingenious simulation of a balloon
flight to the moon or in "A Descent into the
Maelstrom!' Poe's imaginative science and
pseudo-science made for compelling pieces
of fiction which led to future amplification in
the work of such writers as Jules Verne, Isaac
Asimov and Arthur Clarke.
Another popular form which Poe created, was
the treasure-mystery combination with builtin clues, which Robert Louis Stevenson later
capitalized on. This type of story has been
required adolescent reading for decades, but
was poorly developed until the "The Gold
Bug was published.
Poe is justifiably famous for his tales of terror, his "arabesques" as he called them, in
contrast with his "grotesques" or humorous
satires on Gothic works. From "Morella", the
first of his treatments of the death and terrifying rebirth of a beautiful woman which was
to find its most compelling expression in "The
Fall of the House of Usher", Poe uses his
awesome imaginative power. In such tales
as "The Black Cat", "The Imp of the Perverse" and "The Pit and the Pendulum", Poe
developed his ability to convey imagined
horror by making it immediately physical
Because of the power of Poe's narrative
voice man 1 ' a talc is indelible Pee s ima n instive sociology in "The Man of the Crowd" will
tell you more about loneliness in the crowd
than David Riesman did. The psychological
analysis in "William Wilson" is an excellent
and frightening exploration of split personality two generations before Freud.
One would think that Poe would be best remembered for his powerful tales, but much
of his international reputation rests on his
critical acumen which pointed in equally new
directions. Poe was among the first to discern
the tendency of the age toward "the curt, the
condensed, the pointed, the readily diffused!'
In a famous critical piece. Poe recognized
Hawthorne as one of our "few men of indisputable genius;" he went on to formulate his
famous conception of the short story, which
must be designed for "a single effect" and
every word of which must be made to count.
Poe applied his test of condensation to poetry.
He had read and absorbed Coleridge, and he
responded to the aesthetics of the European
romantics. When Poe embodied romantic
tendencies, abridged them into rules with his
assured spareness and so decreed that a
poem must be short as well as extraordinarily crafted, he foreshadowed the direction of
symbolist and modern poetry. In his essay,
"The Philosophy of Composition," Poe proceeded to deliver a detailed account of every step in the process of designing "The
Raven," ostensibly to suit popular and critical taste at once. Poe himself spoke of this
essay as being his "best specimen of analysis." The essay epitomized Poe's greatest
critical contribution, his insistence upon the
application of a rigorous method in all forms
of thought."
Poe's approach to literature, his famous
method which emphasized strict artistic control rather than the spontaneous overflow of
powerful emotion, earned him the homage
of the French symbolists such as Baudelaire
who spent fourteen years translating his
tales. A phrase in Marginalia," "my heart
laid bare" becomes the title of Baudelaire's
journal, while another phrase "the orange ray
of the s p e c t r u m and the buzz ot a
gnat, affect me with nearly similar sensations" was reflected in Baudelaire's epochmaking sonnet "Correspondances."
Poe's method leads to the symbolist poetry of
Mallarme and to Rimbaud and the dreaminspired surrealists. Poe's brooding heroes
and symbolic houses lead to the decadent
heroes, new Roderick Ushers with their concern for the artifical detail of their shut-in
paradise, reflected earlier in such Poe tales
as "The Masque of the Red Death" and "The
Philosophy of Furniture."
Poe is returned to America through French
symbolism, and so made digestible to such
important American poets as T.S. Eliot and
Wallace Stevens. In opposition to the romantic stress on the expression of personality,
Poe insisted on the importance not of the
artist, but of the created work of art. He
stands as one of the few great innovators in
American literature who took his place in
international culture as an original creative
force.
Other Sites Honoring Edgar Allan Poe
The Edgar Allan Poe
House and MuseumPoe s Baltimore home.
1832-1835. Site hours
fluctuate seasonally,
please call for schedule.
Operated by Baltimore City
under the Commission for
Historic and Architectural
Preservation, For more
I
mation. contact
more. MD 21202.
ission charged
Edgar Allan Poe Cottage-The final home ol Edgar
Allan Poe Open Saturday 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and
Sunday 1 to 5 p.m. Administered by the Bronx County
Historical Socrety. For more information, contact the
Historical Society. 3309 Bainbridge Avenue. The Bronx,
NY 10467. (718)881-8900. Admission charged.
Poe Museum-Guided lours dedicaled to telling Poe's
story Open Tuesday - Saturday 10 a m. lo 4 p m. and
Sunday & Monday, 1 p.m. to 4 p.m Operated by the
Poe Foundation For information contact Poe
Foundation. 1914-16 East Main Street. Richmond. VA
23223. (804) 648-5523. Admission charged