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The Mysterious Death of Edgar Allan Poe

The Mysterious Death of Edgar Allan Poe

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Edgar Allan Poe— the writer who invented the detective story— also left behind one of America’s strangest unsolved deaths. In this Time & Tales dark history episode, we follow Edgar Allan Poe’s final week in 1849: from his disappearance in Richmond to his sudden reappearance in Baltimore outside Gunner’s Hall on election day, delirious and dressed in another man’s clothes.

We walk through the scant hospital records and all the main theories, to discover what the evidence really supports—and why no single explanation can close the case.

If you’re drawn to Edgar Allan Poe, 19th-century true crime, and historical mysteries, this episode is for you.

**We had a few sound issues with this episode. Our apologies! We had to use our backup mics and their gain is factory set to broadcast to Mars.

Sources & Further Reading

  • Edgar Allan Poe Society of Baltimore — “The Mysterious Death of Edgar Allan Poe”; site materials on Gunner’s Hall, Washington College Hospital, and Poe’s grave. Edgar Allan Poe Society of Baltimore
  • National Park Service — “The Mystery of Edgar Allan Poe’s Death”; “Edgar Allan Poe” biography. National Park Service
  • Smithsonian Magazine — “The (Still) Mysterious Death of Edgar Allan Poe.” Smithsonian Magazine
  • Maryland Center for History & Culture — “Here at Last He is Happy: The Death and Burial of Edgar Allan Poe.” Maryland History
  • R. Michael Benitez, “A Diagnosis of Rabies in Edgar Allan Poe,” Maryland Medical Journal (1996) + contemporary coverage. The Washington Post
  • “Death of Edgar Allan Poe” – Wikipedia (overview of events, theories, and burial/reburial). Wikipedia

Further Reading (Books) Kevin J. Hayes, Edgar Allan Poe; John Evangelist Walsh, Midnight Dreary: The Mysterious Death of Edgar Allan Poe; Jeffrey A. Savoye, Poe Society papers; Mary Newton Stanard, Edgar Allan Poe: A Biography.

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