Remembering Poe—Sarah Helen Whitman Comes to the Betsey Williams Cottage

From the North Burial Ground Facebook page:

Celebrate National Poetry Month this April with North Burial Ground and the Roger Williams Park Museum of Natural History & Planetarium at the Betsey Williams Cottage! We are hosting a special afternoon performance of “Remembering Poe.” Join us on April 8th at 2pm in the Betsey Williams Cottage at Roger Williams Park.

Meet Sarah Helen Whitman, a descendant of one of the first families of Providence, as she courageously takes on the daunting challenge of defending the reputation of her one-time fiancée: Edgar Allan Poe. Like Poe, Whitman was an extremely intelligent poet and critic. Hear her recall in her own words what it was like to be courted by “The Raven” and her heroic efforts to counteract the libelous Poe biographer Rufus Griswold.

Whitman is performed by actress Helen McKenna, who retired from the Edgar Allan Poe National Historic Site. Collaborating with McKenna to help provide context will be up and coming Providence Whitman scholar, Levi Lionel Leland.

North Burial Ground regulars will know that Sarah Helen Whitman is one of our favorite “residents” of the cemetery. We are so excited to be able to bring you this performance and chance to encounter Whitman in a new way. We are hosting the event in partnership with our friends at the RWP Museum of Natural History and Planetarium in the Betsey Williams Cottage at Roger Williams Park (we said it twice, so you all note that this event is not taking place at the cemetery). Sarah Helen Whitman and Betsey Williams were contemporaries, and while we don’t know for sure that Whitman ever visited Williams at the cottage, we are excited to present this program to you in an amazing historic space where Whitman would have felt right at home.

This program is free, but an RSVP is required as space is limited. To RSVP, please email northburialground@providenceri.gov by April 4th to reserve your space.

Hope to see you there!

A Walking Tour of Poe’s Providence: 2022 Schedule

The 2022 tour schedule has been posted! Click on your preferred date below to reserve your spot through Eventbrite:

Saturday, October 15, 5pm-7pm

Sunday, October 16, 12pm-2pm

Saturday, October 22, 2pm-4pm

Saturday, October 29, 4pm-6pm

Saturday, November 5, 2pm-4pm

Saturday, November 19, 2pm-4pm

If these dates or times do not work for you, you can always schedule a private tour by clicking here. I will do my best to accommodate you!

Photo of a group on a tour in 2021 while traversing through St. John’s graveyard.

The Second Annual Wreath Laying Ceremony For Sarah Helen Whitman

This will be our second annual graveside commemoration of the life and legacy of Sarah Helen Whitman for the 144th anniversary of her death. The event will take place on Saturday, June 25, 2022 at 4:00pm at the North Burial Ground in Providence, Rhode Island.

There will be a biographical overview of Whitman’s life and times with details regarding her infamous courtship with Edgar Allan Poe that took place right here in Providence!

I am pleased to announce the following guests of honor:

-Local historian, tour guide, and actress, Catherine Hurst will be reprising her role as Mrs. Whitman to recite selected poems from her body of works.

-Poet and Poe Scholar Sherri Weaver Poe will be joining us from Maryland as a guest reader.

-And finally, Jeff Jerome, curator emeritus formerly with The Edgar Allan Poe House and Museum in Baltimore will be honoring us again this year as our guest speaker!

Following these segments will be information on Whitman’s death and funeral, closing with a wreath laying tribute on her grave. Guests will also be able to pay their own tribute to the poetess by choosing from an assortment of provided greens and flowers to place on her grave.

All questions for myself and the guests of honor will be welcomed at the end of the program!

The gates of the cemetery are closed and locked at 6:30pm, so you will have time to explore after the event. There is a lot of history and beauty to behold at the North Burial Ground!

To find the location of the event (Sarah Helen Whitman’s grave) just head to the right of the fork after entering the front gates of the cemetery and follow the road named Eastern Ave straight through until you see Dahlia Path (or people/cars). There is also free parking on North Main Street where you can walk through North Burial Ground’s Rochambeau gates and travel on foot just a short distance to the approximate location of the event.

This annual remembrance is one of the biggest celebrations of Sarah Helen Whitman’s life and legacy in recent history! You won’t want to miss it.

If you have any questions prior to the event, please feel free to reach out on this page, email me at levi@edgarallanpoeri.com, or visit the official event page on Facebook here.

Hope to see you there!

Better Left Unpublished: “The Unpublished Correspondence of Edgar Allan Poe”

John Henry Ingram was a young, ambitious Englishman endeavoring to write the first true biography of Edgar Allan Poe. In 1873, he wrote to Sarah Helen Whitman appealing for her aid. Whitman had already spent the last few decades of her life vindicating Poe and publishing her own pieces about him, including her own short biography titled Edgar Poe and His Critics, in 1860. She wrote back to Ingram, unknowingly starting a very turbulent, dramatic, and peculiar correspondence over the next five years.

Whitman was optimistic of Ingram’s prospects, but she did not hesitate to assist other aspiring biographers where she saw fit. This often angered Ingram, as Whitman was such an asset to him that he did not want to share this treasure trove of information. The idea of having another biographer possibly steal his spotlight caused Ingram to be moody, unappreciative, and just plain crass. However, Whitman never wavered. She handled him with the utmost eloquence while outwitting and outdoing him. She never made it obvious, allowing Ingram to realize for himself that she was socially superior.

Despite Ingram’s capricious nature, Whitman continued to write to him, sending him a plethora of information and materials regarding Poe. But she was not the only one sending Ingram pieces of Poe’s life. Marie Louise Shew and Nancy “Annie” Richmond also aided Ingram in his quest after he had reached out to them. These women were involved with Poe in varying degrees of romantic intensity, albeit, mostly one-sided. They were the subject of an article published by Ingram in Appleton’s Journal in May, 1878, titled “Unpublished Correspondence of Edgar Allan Poe.” This article was the final straw in the five year relationship between Whitman and Ingram. 

In a hurry to get this previously unpublished material to press, Ingram made public some of the letters provided by these ladies that were written to them by Poe. It was the letters from Poe to Annie (a married woman in Lowell, Massachusetts) that served as the fatal jab on the seventy five-year-old Whitman’s ailing heart. A letter from Poe to Annie dated November 16, 1848 opens: “Ah, Annie, Annie! What cruel thoughts must have been torturing your heart during the last terrible fortnight in which you heard nothing from me—not even one little word to say that I lived…But, Annie, I know that you felt too deeply the nature of my love for you to doubt that, even for one moment, and this thought has comforted me in my bitter sorrow.”

The letter continues on with more professions of love and even a request for Annie to visit him to comfort him, calling her his “pure beautiful angel.” This letter is by no means unusual for Poe in his attempts to swoon a woman; however, it is the date of the letter that devastated Whitman. For the first time in her life, Whitman found out that Poe was writing impassioned letters to other women in November, 1848, the exact time he was pursuing Whitman in Providence. Ingram knew the implications of publishing this letter, but he did it anyway. 

But it does not stop there. Ingram included even more letters from Poe to Annie that were written after Poe’s relationship with Whitman ended. In one of these letters, Poe writes: “Indeed, indeed, Annie, there is nothing in this world worth living for except love—love not such as I once thought I felt for Mrs. —, but such as burns in my very soul for you[…].”

It is bold to think that Ingram was doing some kind of justice to Whitman by dashing out her name in the transcription of Poe’s letter, but she was not a fool. The publication of these letters absolutely crushed her. Whitman truly believed that she was one of the only true loves of Poe after the death of his wife. Not only was this a posthumous betrayal from a man she came so close to marrying three decades prior, but a betrayal from the friend she had invested so much of her time in over the last five years. Ingram omitted other pieces entirely from the letters that would have certainly been even more damaging to Whitman, including a line where Poe calls her mother the devil. Still, Ingram’s thoughtlessness cost him everything. Not only did it tarnish his relationship with Whitman, but it inadvertently worked against what they were both working so hard to achieve: defending Poe’s name. The article made Whitman look bad, and made Poe look even worse. In a final act of courage and redemption, Whitman published her first and only attack on Ingram in The Providence Journal, discrediting his article and questioning his discretion. A month later she was in her grave, undoubtedly put there after the realization that she could no longer linger in her efforts on this cold earth. She could only hope that her work was enough to accomplish the mission she set forth despite so much adversity. Centuries later, her efforts proved not in vain.        

Bowen to Brown Street: Correcting an Error

Since the beginning stages of my research into Sarah Helen Whitman’s Providence, I have identified the site of her death as the attractive, off-white house with black shutters overlooking Prospect Terrace at 97 Bowen Street. It is embarrassing to admit, but it must be formally addressed (no pun intended) that I was incorrect in identifying that location as the Dailey home where Whitman took her last breath.

When Whitman moved into the Dailey’s home in January, 1878, it was located at 97 Bowen Street. She spent no more than five months there before she passed away in June of that same year. Her well-attended wake was held in the house, too.

Recently, my friend, Donovan Loucks (webmaster of The H. P. Lovecraft Archive, and, by my proclamation, master of geography) brought to my attention that Whitman’s description of her view from the second story of the Dailey home did not quite make sense for the location I had pinned. So, Loucks did what he does best, and quickly found that in 1878, the Dailey home was perpendicular to Brown Street with the side of the house facing Bowen. Sometime between 1882 and 1899, Brown Street was extended to the front of the Dailey house and it was readdressed entirely to 133 Brown Street. This, of course, changed the numbering on Bowen Street, making today’s 97 Bowen Street completely irrelevant to Whitman and the Dailey family. The correct address of the house is 133 Brown Street, and it is there that you will find the very site where Sarah Helen Whitman passed away in the care of her friends. 

Research is ever-developing, leaving the researcher ever-learning. I am chalking this one up as a learning experience and a reminder to double, triple—hell, quadruple check locations that I am investigating.

Below is a photo taken today during my first visit to the true site of Sarah Helen Whitman’s death. The Dailey family home at 133 Brown Street:

The Dailey home where Whitman died in 1878. Located today at 133 Brown Street.

Edgar and Helen’s Birthday Salon: January 19, 2022

Sarah Helen Whitman is among the North Burial Ground’s favorite “residents.” Her courtship with Edgar Allan Poe is one of the most talked about aspects of her life.

Poe and Whitman shared a birthday, so we are throwing them a birthday poetry salon! We like to think it is how they would have celebrated their joint-birthday while they were together. Join the North Burial Ground and independent Poe scholar, creator of edgarallanpoeri.com, A Walking Tour of Poe’s Providence, and North Burial Ground Docent, Levi L. Leland for an evening of poetry and history!

We will have a short presentation, a Q&A with Levi, and then we will share some poetry together. Bring your favorite poem or an excerpt to share with us! The evening starts at 6pm.

This is a virtual event and will be hosted on Microsoft Teams. Just follow the link here on the scheduled date and time: https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_MDA4NWUwODItMDE2Zi00ZWFiLWFlZWQtYmM1YTUxOTM2OThj%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%22561baac9-45d8-4ace-90d5-f642ceb985af%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%2259af55d4-6428-4597-91cf-e22176f00a6e%22%7d

Edgar Allan Poe and Sarah Helen Whitman: A Legacy Enduring at The Poe Museum

The Poe Museum in Richmond, Virginia is home to the rarest, most extensive collection of Poe artifacts in the world. Their latest acquisition will undoubtedly excite Poe fans, but especially those who are interested in Poe’s courtship with Providence poetess, Sarah Helen Whitman. Here is what The Poe Museum had to say about an ambrotype of Poe they recently acquired:

“You may not recognize its name, most of you are familiar with the popular ‘Ultima Thule’ daguerreotype taken of Poe in Providence in 1848. It appears on T-shirts, internet memes, and even socks. The Poe Museum is fortunate enough to own one of the few original copies made before the plate disappeared around 1860.

Fewer of you may know the daguerreotype taken four days later and which Poe himself deemed the best picture ever taken of him. He presented it to his fiancée Sarah Helen Whitman. The Poe Museum has recently acquired an early ambrotype copy dating to the 1860s. The museum’s copy was made while Whitman still owned the original but we do not know who she made it for. This is just one of the puzzles to solve as we study this fascinating image.”

Sarah Helen Whitman worked tenaciously to preserve Poe’s legacy, even after their turbulent courtship ended abruptly here in Providence. This ambrotype is a solidifying example of that effort, as Whitman was having her materials copied and published in numerous articles, books, and biographies on Poe in the subsequent years after his death. She even gifted some of her priceless pieces to early Poe biographers and fans around the world. The original daguerreotype that this ambrotype was copied from is in the collection of Brown University at the John Hay Library in Providence. You can read more about that daguerreotype here.

This ambrotype will be on display for the very first time at The Poe Museum’s “UnHappy Hour” this month before it goes under professional restoration work to exhume a clearer image of the poet.

The First Annual Wreath Laying Ceremony For Sarah Helen Whitman: A Great Success!

Sunday, June 27, 2021, the long anticipated Annual Wreath Laying Ceremony For Sarah Helen Whitman took place at the North Burial Ground in Providence, Rhode Island. The occasion marked the 143rd anniversary of Whitman’s death.

Jeff Jerome, curator emeritus formerly with The Edgar Allan Poe House and Museum in Baltimore, Maryland was our guest speaker, and Catherine Beyer Hurst, local historian and actress, played Mrs. Whitman.

We had a modest turnout of enthralled guests who traveled as far as New York and Washington D.C.! One special Poe enthusiast was from Peru! It was such an honor to have them gathered at this event.

At the closing of the ceremony, Jeff Jerome presented me with a piece of horsehair plaster wall from the suite in which Edgar Allan Poe and his wife, Virginia Clemm Poe, spent their honeymoon in Petersburg, Virginia.

Our wheels are already turning for next year! Until then, enjoy these photos of a few of the highlights from this year’s event…

The grave of Sarah Helen Whitman with a custom wreath made by Bloom Back Flowers.
Organizer and presenter, Levi Lionel Leland.
Jeff Jerome, curator emeritus formerly with The Edgar Allan Poe House and Museum in Baltimore, Maryland.
Jeff Jerome with our actress, Catherine Hurst, who played Mrs. Whitman.
Left to right: Poe enthusiast Roger Bow, who traveled from New York to attend the event, organizer and presenter Levi Leland, and curator emeritus of the Poe House, Jeff Jerome.
Our actress Catherine Hurst as Mrs. Whitman, reading selected poems from Mrs. Whitman’s works.
The enthralled audience!
Poe enthusiast from Peru, who traveled from Washington D.C. to attend the program!
Jerome presenting Leland with a piece of wall from the honeymoon suite of Edgar Allan Poe and Virginia Clemm Poe.

An Exciting Update For The First Annual Wreath Laying Ceremony

There has been an exciting addition to our event coming up on Sunday, June 27:

Jeff Jerome, curator emeritus formerly with the Edgar Allan Poe House and Museum in Baltimore, Maryland will be a guest speaker at the ceremony! He has been featured in numerous documentaries and books regarding Poe, and his service to The Edgar Allan Poe House and Museum ran for decades. Jerome has been a major proponent in keeping Poe’s legacy alive and well. It is an honor to have him here in Rhode Island to commemorate one of the first advocates for Poe, Sarah Helen Whitman.

If you have been on the fence about attending this event, now is the time to mark it on your calendar! It is not every day that you get to have a major authority on Poe at your disposal.

Please follow this link to the official Facebook event page and let me know if you have any questions in the meantime!

https://www.facebook.com/events/3988005677954563?ref=newsfeed

Photo from The Baltimore Sun

Join Us For The First Annual Wreath Laying Ceremony For Sarah Helen Whitman

Sunday, June 27, 2021 will mark the 143rd anniversary of Sarah Helen Whitman’s death. For the occasion, we will be hosting our first annual graveside commemoration at the North Burial Ground to celebrate her life and legacy. There will be a biographical overview with information regarding her courtship with Edgar Allan Poe that took place right here in the city of Providence, there will be readings from selected poetry from the works of Mrs. Whitman, and finally, we will close with a wreath laying tribute on her grave. Questions will be welcomed at the end!

I do not expect a large turnout, but masks and social distancing will be required, regardless. These rules are not just common sense for our current times, but the official rules of the cemetery, so they must be followed.

The event will start at 12:00pm and end around 1:00pm. The gates of the cemetery are closed and locked at 6:45pm, so you will have plenty of time to explore after the event. There is a lot of beauty to behold at the North Burial Ground!

To find the exact location of the event (Sarah Helen Whitman’s grave) just head to the right of the fork after entering the front gates of the cemetery and follow the road named Eastern Ave straight through until you see Dahlia Path (or people/cars). If you have any questions prior to the event, please feel free to reach out!

Follow this link to the official event page via Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/3988005677954563/?ref=newsfeed

Hope to see you there!


Ave Atque Vale!