Episode Description: 
While he never lived in Rhode Island, Edgar Allan Poe famously spent time here at the end of his life. He courted a Providence writer, Sarah Helen Whitman, and spent time at her East Side home, Swan Point Cemetery and the Athenaeum. 
Episode Source Material: 
- About… – Edgar Allan Poe: Rhode Island
 - Sarah Helen Whitman, Providence Poet Who Dumped Edgar Allan Poe - New England Historical Society
 - Sarah Helen Whitman, Providence Poet Who Dumped Edgar Allan Poe - New England Historical Society
 - Sarah Helen Whitman - Wikipedia
 - Sarah Helen Whitman | Poetry Foundation
 - Sarah Helen Whitman | Biography, Books, & Facts | Britannica
 - Ulalume - Wikipedia
 - Poe & Whitman
 - Benefit Street: Sarah Helen Whitman Residence, Rose Garden, & St. John's Cathedral – Edgar Allan Poe: Rhode Island
 - “Ulalume” & The American Whig Review – Edgar Allan Poe
 - The Franklin Lyceum – Edgar Allan Poe: Rhode Island
 - Sarah Helen and Susan Anna Residence, 140 Power Street – Edgar Allan Poe
 - Swan Point Cemetery – Edgar Allan Poe
 - “Ultima Thule” – Edgar Allan Poe
 - Sarah Helen Whitman – Edgar Allan Poe
 - The (Still) Mysterious Death of Edgar Allan Poe | History | Smithsonian Magazine
 - Poe Biography - The Poe Museum
 - Edgar Allan Poe & Sarah Helen Whitman | curio
 - Edgar Allan Poe and His Tumultuous Romances (US National Park Service)
 - Edgar Allan Poe on Valentine's Day
 - Poe, Lynch, and the Literary Salon Scene
 - Edgar Allan Poe Society of Baltimore - Works - Letters - SH Whitman to EA Poe (early August 1848)
 - Works - Letters - EA Poe to SH Whitman (September 5, 1848)
 - Works - Letters - SH Whitman to EA Poe (September 27-29, 1848)
 - The Last Letters of Edgar Allan Poe to Sarah Helen Whitman
 - Edgar Allan Poe Society of Baltimore - Works - Letters - EA Poe to SH Whitman (November 24, 1848)
 - Edgar Allan Poe Society of Baltimore - People - Mrs. Frances Sargent Osgood
 - The Life and Addictions of Edgar Allan Poe
 - Death of Edgar Allan Poe - Wikipedia
 - Edgar Allan Poe - Wikipedia
 
Virginia Clemm | History of American Women