Amidst Poe's centennial in 1909, a group of Richmond residents campaigned for the city to better recognize the writer. Citizens asked the city council to erect a statue of Poe on
Monument Avenue, but were turned down because he was deemed a disreputable character. The same group went on to found the Poe Museum.
The New York Times called 1909 a banner year for acknowledgement of the importance of Poe, mentioning the Richmond museum. In 1911,
Preservation Virginia (formerly known as the
Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities) saved the house and opened it in 1922 as the Old Stone House. The museum is only blocks away from the sites of Poe's Richmond homes and place of employment, the
Southern Literary Messenger. It is also a few blocks from the grave of his mother
Eliza Poe who was buried in Richmond's
Church Hill neighborhood, in the graveyard of
St John's Church. Poe never lived in this home. Its completion, originally as the "Edgar Allan Poe Shrine", was announced on October 7, 1921: This day... at a first expense of about $20,000, completes the Edgar Allan Poe Shrine, and marks the seventy-second anniversary of the death of the poet. If he is aware of mundane affairs he must be pleased to find that, at length, there has been reared to his memory a lasting and appropriate memorial. Actor
Vincent Price, who had played in numerous film roles based on Poe stories, was a noted fan of the author. He visited the museum in 1975 and had his photo taken with the museum's renowned stuffed raven. In 2014, his daughter
Victoria Price visited the museum, saying that Poe had been such a part of her life that she thought of him as her uncle. In 2016 Victoria Price returned to Richmond as part of a film festival featuring Poe films. The festival, in addition to a
Poe Goes to the Movies Unhappy Hour with Victoria Price at the Poe Museum, presented films at Richmond's historic
Byrd Theatre and
An Evening with Victoria Price at the Cultural Arts Center in
Glen Allen, Virginia. == Exhibits ==