This Bas-relief of Edgar Allan Poe by J. Genson, 1973, illuminates the front of the poet's tomb in Westminster Burying Ground, Baltimore, Maryland.
It is a modern replacement for the 1875 medallion by Frederick Volck. The Edgar Allan Poe Society explains what happened.
The front of the monument features a bas-relief bust of Poe, with the dates 1809 and 1849. (The original portrait of Poe was carved in statuary marble by Frederick Volck. Over the years, the soft marble became terribly weathered and worn. It was replaced in 1938 with a newer copy, cast in bronze. This copy was stolen in the late 1970s and again replaced. The original medalion is now on display in the Edgar Allan Poe House and Museum in Baltimore, MD.)
The Volck Medallion wound up in the Edgar Allen Poe House and Museum on Amity Street.
The Edgar Allen Poe Society's signage in the Museum says this about the marble medallion.
The Poe Monument was erected in 1875. The remains of Poe and Maria Clemm were removed from the original Poe family plot in the rear of the Old Western Burial Grounds. Virginia’s were moved form New York in 1895 and buried on the left side of the monument. Baltimore school teachers raised funds from Baltimore school children through a “Pennies for Poe” collection to help pay for the monument.
The original base relief was stolen in 1968 and replaced with a bronze medallion which was also stolen shortly after it was mounted on the monument. That was replaced by the current recessed bronze medallion.
The original marble base relief was accidentally found in a Leesburg Virginia antique shop where it was being sold as a Confederate Civil War tablet. In 1978 it was donated to the Poe House and Museum. The condition of the stone is the result of acid rain, pollution and rough handling.
This detail from the cover image of Leslie's Illustrated Weekly Newspaper, December 12, 1875 shows Volck's marble relief of Poe.
“A few lines of a very morbid poem of Poe's reproduced from the actual manuscript, which is in Richard Gimbel's collection.”
Could I but know when I am sleeping
Low in the ground
One faithful heart would there be keeping
Watch all night round,
As if some gem lay shrined beneath
That sod's cold gloom,
’T would mitigate the pangs of death
And light the tomb.
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