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The Edgar Allan Poe Cottage (or Poe Cottage) is the former home of American writer Edgar Allan Poe.It is located on Kingsbridge Road and the Grand Concourse in the Fordham neighborhood of the Bronx, New York, [2] a short distance from its original location, and is now in the northern part of Poe Park.
Edgar Allan Poe, 1809–1849: A Critical Biography. New York: Haskell House. Robinson, Marilynne, "On Edgar Allan Poe", The New York Review of Books, vol. LXII, no. 2 (February 5, 2015), pp. 4, 6. Tresch, John (2021). The Reason for the Darkness of the Night: Edgar Allan Poe and the Forging of American Science. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux.
New York City Board of Education District 10 and The Bronx County Historical Society, 1989. Bronx Faces and Places: Valentine-Varian House. New York City Board of Education District 10 and The Bronx County Historical Society, 1986. Edgar Allan Poe Cottage. BronxNet, Bronx Tourism Council, and The Bronx County Historical Society, 2010.
Edgar Allan Poe Museum or Edgar Allan Poe House may refer to: ... Edgar Allan Poe Cottage, in the Bronx, New York; Edgar Allan Poe National Historic Site, ...
Only pre-Revolutionary manor house still surviving in New York City Dyckman Farmhouse Museum: Inwood: Manhattan: Historic house Late 18th-century farmhouse, the oldest remaining farmhouse on Manhattan island Edgar Allan Poe Cottage: Fordham: Bronx: Historic house 1840s house where author Edgar Allan Poe lived Gracie Mansion: Upper East Side ...
Warning: This story contains spoilers for "The Fall of the House of Usher." Michael Flanagan’s chilling new series “The Fall of the House of Usher” is an homage to Edgar Allan Poe, from the ...
TIL that Edgar Allan Poe wrote his first detective stories after trying to debunk a famous chess-playing "robot" called The Mechanical Turk in 1836. ... TIL that New York restaurants that opened ...
The Edgar Allan Poe National Historic Site is a preserved home once rented by American author Edgar Allan Poe, located at 532 N. 7th Street, in the Spring Garden neighborhood of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Though Poe lived in many houses over several years in Philadelphia (1838 to 1844), it is the only one which still survives. [2]