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This photograph was taken about
1983. The three-story building is primarily
red brick, with white woodwork. The front door is painted black. There
are black wrought iron bars on the windows of the first floor. The
historic
plaque, mounted between these widows, reads:
"The Latrobe House"
"On an evening in October, 1833, three of Baltimore's most
discerning
gentlemen were gathered around a table in the back parlor of this
house.
Fortified with 'some old wine and some good cigars,' John Pendleton
Kennedy,
James H. Miller and John H. B. Latrobe pored over manuscripts submitted
in a literary contest sponsored by the Baltimore Saturday Visiter.
Their unanimous choice for the best prose tale was 'MS. Found in a
Bottle,'
a curious and haunting tale of annihilation. The fifty dollar prize was
awarded to the story's unknown penniless author -- Edgar Allan Poe."
"Poe had come to Baltimore in the spring of 1831, after his
dismissal
from West Point. He had no money, no trade and no reputation. The four
years he spent in Baltimore were a period of intense creativity. His
major
effort during those years were sixteen tales he wrote for the Folio
Club,
an imaginary literary club of his creation. One of these sixteen tales
was 'MS. Found in a Bottle'"
"The prize for this story, the public recognition that it brought and
the lifelong friendship it generated between Poe and literary patron
Kennedy
helped to launch Poe on his brilliant career. He left Baltimore in 1835
to become editor of the Southern Literary Messenger." |
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