Edgar Allen Poe

  • Jan 19, 1809 Edgar Allan Poe is Born.

    Jan 19, 1809 Edgar Allan Poe is Born.
    Edgar Poe is born in Boston to Elizabeth Arnold Poe and David Poe, Jr., both traveling actors. The couple already has one son named Henry.
  • Dec 10, 1810 Poe’s Sister is born

    Dec 10, 1810 Poe’s Sister is born
    Poe's sister Rosalie is born. Shortly after her birth, or possibly even before it, David Poe deserts the family, leaving Poe's mother alone with three children. Making matters worse, Elizabeth Poe soon falls ill with tuberculosis.
  • Aug 1, 1831 Poe’s older brother dies.

    Aug 1, 1831 Poe’s older brother dies.
    Edgar's older brother Henry dies of either tuberculosis or cholera at the age of 27.
  • May 16, 1836 Poe marries his thirteen year old cousin, Virginia Clemm.

    May 16, 1836 Poe marries his thirteen year old cousin, Virginia Clemm.
    The couple were first cousins and married when Virginia Clemm was 13 and Poe was 27. Biographers disagree as to the nature of the couple's relationship. Though their marriage was loving, some biographers suggest they viewed one another more like a brother and sister. In January 1842 she contracted tuberculosis, growing worse for five years until she died of the disease at the age of 24 in the family's cottage, then outside New York City.
  • 1838 Poe writes his first novel The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym.

    1838 Poe writes his first novel The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym.
    The only complete novel written by American writer Edgar Allan Poe. The work relates the tale of the young Arthur Gordon Pym, who stows away aboard a whaling ship called the Grampus.
  • 1845 Poe publishes the poem, The Raven.

    1845 Poe publishes the poem, The Raven.
    Poe publishes the poem , The Raven in the New York Evening Mirror. It is wildly successful, bringing the writer the fame and fortune that have long eluded him. He soon becomes editor and owner of a magazine called the Broadway Journal, a doomed enterprise that is already in debt when Poe takes over.
  • Jan 30, 1847 Poe's wife Virginia dies of tuberculosis at their home in the Bronx.

    Jan 30, 1847 Poe's wife Virginia dies of tuberculosis at their home in the Bronx.
    Poe's wife Virginia dies of tuberculosis at their home in the Bronx. Poe has been so despondent during the final months of her illness that friends thought he was going insane. The loss of his wife sends Poe into a downward spiral of alcoholism.
  • Oct 7, 1849 Edgar Allen Poe Dies.

    Oct 7, 1849 Edgar Allen Poe Dies.
    After being found unconscious in a Baltimore gutter, Edgar Allan Poe is taken to the hospital and pronounced dead of causes still unknown. He is buried at Westminster Presbyterian Church in Baltimore.
  • May 26, 1827 Poe enlists in the U.S. Army and shortly after his first book is published.

    May 26, 1827 Poe enlists in the U.S. Army and shortly after his first book is published.
    After running up a $2,000 gambling debt while at college, Poe gets into an argument with his foster father when John Allan refuses to give him money to settle the debt. Poe ditches college and the Allans. He moves to Baltimore to join relatives there.Poe enlists in the U.S. Army under the name "Edgar A. Perry." Shortly after, his first book—a poetry collection entitled Tamerlane and Other Poems—is published. The author is listed only as "A Bostonian."
  • Dec 8, 1811 Poe’s Parents Die

    Dec 8, 1811 Poe’s Parents Die
    Elizabeth Arnold Poe dies of tuberculosis in Richmond, Virginia. Within days, David Poe also dies of tuberculosis. With no parents to take care of them, the three children of the family are split up. Henry goes to live with his paternal grandparents. A Richmond couple, John and Frances Allan, take in Edgar as a foster child. Rosalie is taken in by another Richmond family named Mackenzie. Both Edgar and Rosalie adopt their foster families' names as their middle names.
  • 1824 Poe writes his first poem.

    1824 Poe writes his first poem.
    Poe writes a two-line poem: “— Poetry - Edgar A. Poe — Last night, with many cares & toils oppres‘d, Weary, I laid me on a couch to rest —.” (This is Poe’s earliest surviving poem. It was never published during his lifetime, nor used as part of a longer poem.)
  • 1840 Poe's story collection Tales of the Grotesque and Arabesque is published in two volumes.

    1840 Poe's story collection Tales of the Grotesque and Arabesque is published in two volumes.
    It was published by the Philadelphia firm Lea & Blanchard and released in two volumes. The publisher was willing to print the anthology based on the recent success of Poe's story "The Fall of the House of Usher". Even so, Lea & Blanchard would not pay Poe any royalties; his only payment was 20 free copies. Poe had sought Washington Irving to endorse the book, writing to him, "If I could be permitted to add even a word or two from yourself... my fortune would be made".