Edgar Allan Poe, Author and …Spector?

This is a guest post by Pamela K. Kinney, author of Haunted Surry To Suffolk: Spooky Tales Along Routes 10 and 460.

Edgar Allan Poe

“Even in the grave, all is not lost.” Edgar Allan Poe

Edgar Allan Poe has written horrific and otherworldly stories and poetry. Some are those coming back to haunt the main character. The question here is, has he been seen in specter form?

I’ve been to the old Stone House where the Poe Museum in Richmond, Virginia is housed. It is haunted by children. As for him, maybe where some of his personal effects are. Near his childhood bed I gotten my EMF meter to go off once. Is it him? Or the others that haunt the buildings? No clear answer. I’d returned a second time  with the Richmond Paranormal Society, but I still didn’t get anything concerning Poe. Another spot he has been seen in Richmond is what had been the home of his love and last fiancé and there are claims his ghost has been seem in Shockoe Cemetery. 

There is a famous and unsolved mystery concerning Poe’s gravesite in the Old Western Burial Ground. The remains of people like Edgar Allan Poe, the son of Francis Scott Key, the grandfather of President James Buchanan, five former mayors of Baltimore and fifteen generals from the Revolutionary War and the War of 1812 are buried here.  Few years ago, my husband and I drove pass it to another destination at the time. We never stopped, or gone back to visit it—someday, I hope to. A story about Poe’s grave involves a man seen in the graveyard for more than fifty years. Dressed completely in black, including a black fedora and a black scarf to hide his face, he carries a walking stick and strolls into the cemetery every year on January 19, the birth date of Edgar Allan Poe. On every occasion, he has left behind a bottle of cognac and three red roses on the graveside of the late author. After placing these items with care, he then stands, tips his hat, and walks away. The offerings always remain on the grave, although one year, they were accompanied by a note, bearing no signature, which read: “Edgar, I haven’t forgotten you.”

Tales claim the ghost of Edgar Allan Poe haunts his graveside, but the man in black is alive, just no one knows for sure who he is. He has brought roses and cognac to the cemetery every January since 1949. This past January 2013, he hasn’t. I can only assume he has passed away and is now a ghost himself if anyone sees him.

Legend has it that the ghost of Edgar Allan Poe has been seen near his grave and in the catacombs of the church. At the catacombs, it is said there are cold spots, sounds of footsteps, disembodied whisperings and some visitors have felt the touch of unseen hands too. The author died mysteriously in Baltimore and thus came to be buried there Poe was found barely conscious and lying in a gutter on East Lombard Street in Baltimore. He was rushed to a hospital, but he died a short time later.

Some said Poe’s death was caused by alcohol, others say that he was in a psychotic state and even rabies has been blamed. Other writers believe that he may have been drugged and murdered as the clothes that he wore were not his own and the walking stick he carried belonged to another man. There have been literally dozens of theories posed as to what caused Poe’s death, but no one will ever know for sure. Perhaps the fact that his death remains unexplained is the reason why Poe’s ghost remains in the Old Western Burial Ground.

Poe’s house in Baltimore now a museum is haunted. There are cold spots and people have felt something tapping them on the shoulder. Windows fly open and shut by unseen hands. Witnesses have reported seeing an overweight grey haired woman dressed in clothing of the 1800s. People have heard mysterious voices. An actress was getting dressed for a play based on Berenice, a horror story Poe wrote. A window suddenly fell and crashed to the floor. It had been secure and there were no wind gusts.

During the riots that followed Martin Luther King’s assassination, people saw lights in the house and called the police who also witnessed the lights that moved from floor to floor. They could not get into the house and did not want to break into it, so they surrounded the building and waited for the curator. No one had been in the house. 

His phantom has been seen at Fort Monroe in Hampton, Virginia.  Witnesses claim to have seen his ghost writing away at a desk; he penned some minor poetry collections while on base.

Another possible building for Poe to haunt would be at Hiram Haines Coffee and Ale House in Petersburg, Virginia that his friend owned in 1830s and invited Poe and Virginia Clemm to spend their honeymoon there. I investigated the second-floor suite where they stayed, but I didn’t get any EVPs or voices from the ghost box from him nor from his bride. Does he haunt there? I never heard any stories of his spirit there neither. Only a legend of Virginia seen at a window on January 39th. (Reopened and in my nonfiction ghost book, Paranormal Petersburg, Virginia, and the Tri-Cities Area, it closed before my book was released and put up for sale. Someone who worked on movies and TV shows filmed in Petersburg, bought it.)

Other Spots Poe Is Claimed to Haunt

Washington College Hospital: this is the Baltimore hospital where he died in 1849, it’s been said that Poe’s ghost has been seen roaming its hallways.

Eutaw House: There are a myriad of eerie tales concerning the old Centre County, Pennsylvania, Inn. One is that Poe stopped by, fell in love with a local girl, and was spurned. A spook that physically resembles him has been spotted there, although the local lore seems to associate the apparition with a ghost family haunting its halls.

SEE ALSO:  Was The Pale Blue Eye inspired by a true crime Poe helped solve?

Do you know of places Poe might still haunt that I didn’t mention? Or how about other famous horror authors, like HP Lovecraft or even Bram Stoker? Leave a comment and let us know. 

About the Author

Journey to worlds of fantasy, beyond the stars, and into the vortex of terror with the written word of Pamela K. Kinney. Find her on Facebook and Twitter.

Check out my latest ghost book, Haunted Surry to Suffolk: Spooky Tales Along Routes 10 and 460. The blurb and an excerpt from one of the chapters from the book is below.

Haunted Surrey to Suffolk cover

Blurb

Take a journey along Virginia’s scenic Routes 10 and 460 eastbound to enjoy the lovely countryside and metropolises that spread around these two roads. Most of all, discover that some historical houses, plantations, battlefields, parks, and even the modern cities, have more than touristy knickknacks, ham, and peanuts to offer. Many have ghosts!


Bacon’s Castle has spirits haunting it since the 1600s. Stay in a cabin overnight at Chippokes Plantation State Park and you might find you have a spectral bedfellow. The city of Smithfield has more to offer than the world’s oldest ham; it also has some very old phantoms still stalking its buildings. Take a ghost tour of Suffolk and see why the biggest little city is also one of the spookiest. Discover the myths and legends of the Great Dismal Swamp and see what phantoms are still haunting the wildlife refuge. And if that’s not enough, Bigfoot and UFOs are part of the paranormal scenery. These and other areas of southeastern Virginia are teeming with ghosts, Sasquatch, UFOs, and monsters. See what awaits you along 460 south and 10. No matter which road you take, the phantoms can’t wait to SCARE you a good time.

Excerpt from Smith’s Fort Plantation

Bill drove us to Smith’s Fort Plantation by GPS. We almost missed the driveway, but we found it and drove up it to park near the house. 

I did take the tour inside the house. The place was charming, and the guide knowledgeable. I even bought a couple of postcards. 

I did a ghost box session and after that, an EVP one, to see what I could get, if anything, about any spirits lingering from Smith’s Fort, the house and maybe even any natives. The tour guide had told me she doubted the place was haunted, unlike Preservation Virginia’s other building in Surry, Bacon’s Castle.

 I did the ghost box first and turned it on. 

“Any spirits still lingering here?” 

A male voice uttered from the box, “Yes.” 

“Can you give me a name?” I said again, “A name.” 

No answer. 

I asked again. A woman’s voice said something, but it was low and static also muffled it. 

I tried another question. “Did you come from Jamestown?”

 A male voice said, “Yes.” 

Another voice said, “Virginia.” 

I asked how far from where I stood were the remains of Smith’s second fort. 

A different male voice said, “Three.” 

Three what? Yards? Feet? Miles? Not helpful. 

“Are there spirits still haunting the house on this land?” 

A male voice said, “Ghosts.” 

Another voice uttered, “Virginia.” 

I was excited as I heard the ghost and Virginia clearly and exclaimed, “Ghosts! Did you say ghosts?”

The male voice again replied, “Ghosts.” 

A female voice said, “Haunted Virginia.”

 Okay, that felt creepy to me. Virginia being said twice, the word, ghosts, too, and even more so, the woman using the phrase, Haunted Virginia.

 I said thanks and shut off the box, doing a quick EVP session, but got nothing, except a cow mooing (as there were cows in the pasture next door) and a thump. The thump sounded close to me, and I cannot say for sure if that was paranormal. 

I shut everything off and headed back to the car to hand all equipment to Bill before I went up to the house to take the tour. Afterward, I stopped by the field of flowers planted for butterflies that the tour guide told me about, took some pictures, and paid some money into a box for picking a couple of the flowers to take home. So many insects are disappearing with climate change, and it was great that someone was doing this.

Find Haunted Surry To Suffolk: Spooky Tales Along Routes 10 and 460 in Kindle and Paperback at AMAZON.

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2 Comments

  1. Hi Pamela! Thank YOU for being willing to share some of your book here!!!!

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