- Westminster Hall and Burying Ground
The Westminster Hall and Burying Ground, is a
graveyard and former church located at 519 W. Fayette St. inBaltimore, Maryland . Occupying the southeast corner of Fayette and Greene Street on the west side of downtown Baltimore, the site is probably most famous as the burial site ofEdgar Allan Poe .History
The graveyard was established in 1786 by the First Presbyterian Church, a congregation of socially and economically elite local
Presbyterians . Over the next 60 years, the burying grounds became the final resting place for important and influential merchants, politicians, statesmen, and dozens of veterans of theAmerican Revolutionary War andWar of 1812 . Today, this "who's who" of early Baltimore is overshadowed by the presence of writer Edgar Allan Poe, who was buried here in October 1849 following his sudden and mysterious death. In 1852, a church was erected overtop the graveyard, its brick piers straddling gravestones and burial vaults to create what later Baltimoreans referred to as "catacombs." For years, it was thought that the Gothic Revival-style Westminster Presbyterian Church was built in response to a new city ordinance prohibiting cemeteries that were not adjacent to a religious structure. Research in the early 1980s by historian Michael Franch found no such ordinance--and revealed a more complex motive. The congregation hoped that the new church would serve Baltimore's growing West End--new churches were then springing up in every corner of the city in response to a dramatic increase in population--and provide protection to an aging, old-fashioned 18th-century style burying ground that few saw as an appropriate resting place.Westminster Presbyterian Church lived up to its promise for several decades, but suffered a dramatic loss of congregants by the early 1900s. Revived in the 1920s, the congregation continued until 1977 when care of the premises was assumed by the
University of Maryland School of Law , which occupies the rest of the square block bounded by Baltimore, Paca, Fayette and Greene streets. Under the auspices of the non-profit Westminster Preservation Trust, the burying grounds were cleaned up and the church was renovated for public use as Westminster Hall. In 2006, the Westminster Preservation Trust installed more than 20 interpretive signs around the burying ground and catacombs.The site has been used in an episode of "
Creepy Canada ", withparanormal investigators discussing its possiblehaunting . [ [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0766651/ "Creepy Canada" The Grave of Edgar Allan Poe/The Ghost of the Silver Run Tunnel/Isle of Demons (????) ] ]"Some parts courtesy of the
National Park Service "Persons of note interred
A number of famous Marylanders are interred here, including many Revolutionary patriots and veterans of the
War of 1812 . Other Marylanders include:
*James Calhoun (1743–1816), first Mayor of Baltimore
*James Morrison Harris (1817–1898), formerU.S. Representative
*Edward Johnson (1767–1829), formermayor ofBaltimore
*Philip Barton Key (1818–1859), son ofFrancis Scott Key , Shot and killed byDaniel E. Sickles , his lover's husband, at Lafayette Park,Washington, D.C. ,27 February 1859 .
*James McHenry (1753–1816), signer of theU.S. Constitution and Secretary of War
*Edgar Allan Poe (1809–1849),short story writer, editor and critic
**Virginia Eliza Clemm Poe (1822–1847), wife of Edgar Allan Poe
*Robert Smith (1757–1842), formerSecretary of the Navy , Secretary Of State, and Attorney General
*Samuel Smith (1752-1839),U.S. Congressman ,U.S. Senator , and former mayor ofBaltimore .
*Samuel Sterett (1758–1833), formerU.S. Representative
*John Stricker (1758-1825),War of 1812 Militia Brigadier General.Edgar Allan Poe
.
Westminster Hall is the location of the
Edgar Allan Poe House and Museum 's annual Poe birthday celebration every January, often featuring theatrical presentations and anapple cider toast. The organization claims it is the world's largest Poe birthday celebration. On Poe's birthday, January 19, an unidentified man known endearingly as thePoe Toaster visits the burying ground to make an annual tribute to Poe.References
External links
* [http://www.baltimoresun.com/entertainment/visitor/college/59074,0,5453484.location Westminster Hall] article in
Baltimore Sun
* [http://www.westminsterhall.org/ Westminster Hall] official site.
* [http://www.nps.gov/history/nr/travel/baltimore/index.htm Baltimore, Maryland, a National Park Service "Discover Our Shared Heritage" Travel Itinerary]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.