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The Mystery of Edgar Allan Poe’s Death

One of the most intriguing mysteries about Edgar Allan Poe Poe is how he died at the age of forty. Doing some research on the web, I found the following on the US National Park Service website:

Edgar Allan Poe is credited with writing the first modern detective story, The Murders in the Rue Morgue, in 1840. Most people know Poe from his horror stories i.e. The Pit and the Pendulum and The Fall of the House of Usher; and his poetry, most notably The Raven and Annabel Lee. No subject regarding Edgar Allan Poe ignites as much controversy as his sudden death at the age of forty, which remains shrouded in mystery.

What we know is that Poe planned a trip from Richmond, Virginia, to New York City, during which he traveled by steamer and stopped in Baltimore on September 28, 1849. His actions and whereabouts throughout the next five days are uncertain.

Was Alcohol Involved?

On October 3, 1849, printer Joseph Walker found Poe inside or near Gunner’s Hall tavern, and sent a note for J.E. Snodgrass, one of Poe’s acquaintances in Baltimore. Walker described Poe as appearing in “great distress.”

Snodgrass noted that the clothes Poe wore looked disheveled and out of place: “he had evidently been robbed of his [own] clothing or cheated in an exchange.” Snodgrass and his uncle, Henry Herring, both presumed that Poe was in a drunken state and agreed to send him to Washington College Hospital. Once there, Poe was taken to a room reserved for patients who were ill due to intoxication.

Poe lapsed in and out of consciousness for the next few days, and according to Dr. John J. Moran, who questioned Poe about his condition, Poe’s answers were incoherent and unsatisfactory. Moran also prevented visitors due to Poe’s “excitable” condition.

Moran later noted in a letter to Maria Clemm, Poe’s mother-in-law, that during a period of consciousness, Poe held “vacant converse with spectral and imaginary objects on the walls. His face was pale and his whole person drenched in perspiration.” Poe died quietly before sunrise on Sunday, October 7, 1849.

It may be logical to assume that alcohol played a role in Poe’s death, given that it intermittently surfaced as a negative influence during his adult life. But how does it explain why Poe was wearing somebody else’s clothes? Nor does it provide any insight into the circumstances that caused him to be found in such an unfortunate state.

Was Poe a Victim of Cooping?

One of the most popular theories about Poe’s death stems from the fact that Poe was found on Election Day, and Gunner’s Hall was a polling location. It is possible that on that day, Poe fell victim to cooping, a common method of voter fraud in the 19th century. Cooping victims were kidnapped, drugged or forced to drink, and disguised several times in order to cast several votes. Others have suggested that perhaps Poe was beaten and robbed, or even that he contracted rabies.

Theories abound about Poe’s death, but there has yet to be one that proves definitive—a fittingly mysterious end for the master of mystery.

#GoldenAgeofDetectiveFiction #DrWhodunit #EdgarAllanPoe #MarkBielecki #Cooping

Mystery Surrounds Two Famous Detectives

We’ve all heard of Sherlock Holmes and many of us have read the stories. You may or may not have heard of Nero Wolfe, a fictional detective who lives in Manhattan, raises orchids, is a gourmand and weighs over 300 pounds. And – he rarely leaves his home for any reason and never leaves it on business. It’s speculated in the “Whodunit” community that Nero Wolfe is the illegitimate son of Sherlock Holmes and the love of his life, Irene Adler.  From the Nero Wolfe entry on Wikipedia “In 1956, John D. Clark theorized in an article in The Baker Street Journal that Wolfe was the offspring of an affair between Sherlock Holmes and Irene Adler (a character from “A Scandal in Bohemia”). Clark suggested that the two had an affair in Montenegro in 1892, and that Nero Wolfe was the result.” True? Not true? Who knows……

#DrWhodunit #SherlockHolmes #NeroWolfe #IreneAdler

New Audiobook Released April 7, 2021

It’s entitled The Wall: Chronicle of a Scuba Trial by Dr. Lawrence Martin.A young woman is lost on a scuba dive in Grand Cayman. Did she suffer nitrogen narcosis? Or did she commit suicide? Experts argue both scenarios in a civil trial that takes place 14 months later. Her parents are the plaintiffs. The defendants are a large corporation and its dive master on that fateful day. There are several experts called to testify, including the author. The two lawyers object to each other’s arguments, cite precedent, drill their experts. Yet one thing is missing: her body. It will never be recovered.

The Wall is fiction but it reads like a real case. Put yourself in the jury box, listen to the experts and lawyers battle it out, then make your decision along with the jury. How will you decide? For the plaintiffs or the defense?

#DrWhodunit #scubadiving #courtroomdrama