Erickson Tribune

Charlestown

UPDATED: Monday, March 06, 2006

Charlestown’s Porpora Still Sharing His Passion for Poe

Posted on Monday, March 06, 2006
 

By Danielle Rexrode
THE ERICKSON TRIBUNE

If you’re a Baltimorean chances are you’ve either visited or driven past the gravesite of Baltimore author and poet Edgar Allan Poe. But there’s a less famous Baltimorean who deserves much of the credit for preserving the “home” of the world-famous landmark.

Samuel Porpora grew up in Baltimore’s Little Italy and has lived at Charlestown in Catonsville for nine years now. But for 25 years he lived in a row house on West Fayette Street across from the Westminster Presbyterian Church. That’s where a boyhood fascination with Edgar Allan Poe sent this former restaurant and hotel owner on a single- handed crusade to restore the cemetery where The Raven author is buried.

“The cemetery was a mess,” says Sam who adopted the Westminster church in the mid-1970s and became its historian. “The tombstones were vandalized and overgrown and it was a popular attraction for winos and hobos,” he says.

A Labor of Love

The cemetery, located on the southeast corner of Fayette and Greene streets, was the resting place of the Poe family plot where Poe’s brother, grandfather, wife, and mother-in-law were buried along with Poe. It’s also where many former Baltimore mayors, Revolutionary War, and War of 1812 veterans are buried.

Sam explains that it wasn’t until the mid-1800s when an ordinance was passed that all downtown cemeteries must have a church or chapel onsite or risk being moved, that members of the parish erected Westminster Church right over the old graveyard. He says the church’s basement recreation room has a concrete floor laid over as many as 50 of the old graves. And the furnace room was built on top of Poe’s distant relative Capt. George Poe.

Sam spent most of his free time researching, identifying, cataloging, and restoring gravesites and tombstones in the cemetery and catacombs underneath the church.

“This was an important piece of history right here in our backyard that needed to be preserved. Many of the people buried there played an important part in history,” he says.


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Tales From the Crypt

Sam believes Poe, who lived a few blocks from the graveyard on Amity Street, frequented the cemetery to visit his grandfather General David Poe and may have been inspired to write some of his macabre stories while wandering around the graveyard.

Sam recalls how creepy the catacombs were.

“Whenever I would go down there to work I would lock myself in. Somehow when I would leave, the doors would mysteriously be open. After that I never went down there alone,” he says.

Sam spent many hours digging through the layers of walls and dirt hiding an archway that led to burial vaults. Sam even describes an encounter with a male ghost who appeared while he was working.

In the 1970s Sam began organizing tours of the graveyard on afternoons and evenings. An “insomniac” tour by candlelight started at 11:00 p.m.

“I had high school and college students who volunteered to give tours,” says Sam. “We dubbed them the ‘Abbeys of Westminster.’ We had people come from all over the world to take the tours. In the beginning they were free, but eventually we started charging $2 a person,” he says.

Sam was awarded one of “Baltimore’s Best” by former Mayor William Donald Schaefer for attracting more than 2,000 people a year to the gravesite with his tours.

The publicity caught the attention of actor Vincent Price who starred in The Raven and The Pit and the Pendulum, two of Poe’s works that were made into movies.

“He was a great guy,” says Sam who holds up a picture of himself taken with the actor in front of Poe’s tombstone.

“I was the president of the Edgar Allan Poe Society at the time. I gave him a tour of the cemetery and awarded him a lifetime membership,” says Sam. “Afterwards I asked him if he would write me a letter saying if he enjoyed the tour.”

That letter along with dozens of articles, photos, letters, awards, and handwritten inscriptions from the tombstones he uncovered and a plat of the cemetery are all tucked away in a homemade scrapbook.

Over the years, there’s been strong speculation that the shadowy figure who leaves a bottle of cognac and three roses at the base of Poe’s memorial on the author’s birthday (January 19) each year is Sam. But Sam insists he has nothing to do with the ritual.



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