Edgar Allan Poe was born on January 19, 1809, two hundred and four years ago. This anniversary has coincided with my work this week which has involved preparing digitized images of daguerreotypes of Poe and Providence poet Sarah Helen Whitman for publication to the Brown Digital Repository. The daguerreotypes had been found to be suffering some deterioration and were sent to the Northeast Document Conservation Center for treatment. Poe sat for this daguerreotype, known as the Whitman or Hartshorn Daguerreotype, on November 13, 1848 at the Westminster Street studio of Masury and Hartshorn in Providence, Rhode Island, after a tumultuous week which included an overdose of laudanum and a bout of heavy drinking. The daguerreotype was a gift from Poe to Sarah Helen Whitman, given to her after she finally consented to marry him. The engagement did not last long, but Whitman kept the daguerreotype until 1874. In a letter she noted Poe’s “sweet and serene expression” in the image. The daguerreotype was gifted to the Brown University Library in 1905.
Some of the condition problems with the daguerreotype and its case are apparent in before and after treatment images. The leather spine on the case was broken and cracked along the bottom. The case was scuffed and scratched, and the cover glass was beginning to deteriorate. After disassembling the daguerreotype package, preservationists at NEDCC replaced the cover glass with a more stable borosilicate glass, and used a variety of techniques to repair the case, broken edge, and spine. Of the many materials relating to Poe in the Harris Collection holdings, the daguerreotype is perhaps the best known and most frequently requested. The recent preservation treatment along with its housing in a clamshell presentation box will ensure its longevity for future library patrons.
The daguerreotype of Sarah Helen Whitman is attributed to Joseph White, another Providence daguerreotypist, and dates from 1856. The daguerreotype plate and brass mat were enclosed in a paper-covered wooden case. The cloth spine on the case had been broken and previously “repaired” usuing black electrical tape. The tape and residual adhesive were mechanically removed, and the spine was repaired using cloth toned with acrylic color. The glass was replaced with borosilicate, and the package reassembled and sealed with Filmoplast P90 and a sheet of Melinex.
Sarah Helen Whitman was a poet and essayist and interested in transcendentalism, mesmerism, and spiritualism. She hosted well-known writers at her salon in Providence, and served as vice president of the Rhode Island suffrage association. Poe first set eyes on Whitman as she stood in the rose garden behind her Benefit Street home. The house and garden are much the same as they were nearly two centuries ago.
Digital Production Services in-house photographers recently digitized two photographs of Sarah Helen Whitman, which the author herself inserted into an autographed presentation copy of Whitman’s Hours of Life, and Other Poems. Consult the finding aid for more information on the significant holdings of Sarah Helen Whitman within the Harris Collection of American Poetry and Plays. Brown University also owns a portrait of Whitman painted by John Nelson Arnold in 1869.