Poe Ain't Comin'
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About this listen
"Poe ain't comin'."
That's what they might have said in 1849 in Oquawka, Illinois.
Edgar Allan Poe had already made "The Raven" croak and "The Tell-Tale Heart" beat by 1848 but the Mississippi River town of Oquawka, Illinois, wanted Poe not for his poems and tales but for his fame as an editor and the prestige Poe would bring to the new Oquawka Spectator.
Twenty year-old Edwin Patterson, son of The Spectator's founder, was a Poe fan. Patterson wrote Poe in December, 1848, inviting him to the edge of the Midwest and the beginning of the West. Poe could make The Spectator the literary heart of the nation, Patterson hoped. Oquawka had high hopes for itself too. Civic pride and boosterism were bulwarks of 19th century small town presses.
The life of a magazine editor in 19th Century America could be prestigious as well as precarious. The toast of a town or the nation one moment or falling deeper than the House of Usher the next. Patterson and Poe corresponded for months, with varying degrees of enthusiasm on the part of Poe.
Finally, circumstances intervened. Patterson waited for a letter that never came. Edgar Allan Poe died under strange circumstances in October, 1849. Poe was 40 years old.
Patterson soon caught the gold bug and left for California. The Spectator continued publication until 1908.
This edition was written by Joel Ward and voiced by Joel Ward.
SOURCES
Might Edgar Allan Poe have made Oquawka a literary hub?
Jeff Rankin https://jeffrankin.medium.com/might-edgar-allan-poe-have-made-oquawka-a-literary-hub-6ea6e8c31091
What if Edgar Allan Poe had moved to Oquawka?
Rex Cherrington https://www.thezephyr.com/poequawka.htm
IMAGE
Edgar Allen Poe
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edgar_Allan_Poe
Edgar Allen Poe
Encyclopedia Britannica
https://cdn.britannica.com/52/76652-050-F4A6B093/Edgar-Allan-Poe.jpg
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