After Eliza Poe died in 1811, Rosalie was given a home by the Mackenzies, a prominent Richmond family, but there is conflicting evidence about whether she was treated as a member of the family or merely a ward.
Rosalie seems to have had a distant, if not antagonistic relationship with her famous older brother. She herself claimed that she was "a good size girl" before she even knew she had a sibling--an incredible statement considering they were raised in the same city. Edgar's one-time fiancee, Sarah Helen Whitman, stated that he told her his relationship with Rosalie was characterized by coldness and estrangement. Considering that Rosalie is generally characterized as having a childlike mentality and an off-putting personality, Whitman likely spoke the truth.
Rosalie appears to have led a relatively comfortable and stable existence in the Mackenzie home until the Civil War left the family destitute. Thereafter, her story becomes pure pitable tragedy. The remaining members of her foster family sent her to her Poe relatives in Baltimore. As her kin evidently wanted little to do with her, she was soon left on her own resources--a fate her intelligence, character, and upbringing left her completely unable to handle. She made attempts to gain work as a housekeeper, and was said to walk the streets trying to sell pictures of Edgar to passerby, but her main source of support was "the kindness of strangers," motivated to assist her by admiration for her legendary sibling.
Rosalie spent her last few years in a charity home in Washington, D.C. Her burial was arranged by Edgar Poe fans who, curiously, gave her a tombstone giving her year of birth as 1812--the year after Eliza Poe's death.
After Eliza Poe died in 1811, Rosalie was given a home by the Mackenzies, a prominent Richmond family, but there is conflicting evidence about whether she was treated as a member of the family or merely a ward.
Rosalie seems to have had a distant, if not antagonistic relationship with her famous older brother. She herself claimed that she was "a good size girl" before she even knew she had a sibling--an incredible statement considering they were raised in the same city. Edgar's one-time fiancee, Sarah Helen Whitman, stated that he told her his relationship with Rosalie was characterized by coldness and estrangement. Considering that Rosalie is generally characterized as having a childlike mentality and an off-putting personality, Whitman likely spoke the truth.
Rosalie appears to have led a relatively comfortable and stable existence in the Mackenzie home until the Civil War left the family destitute. Thereafter, her story becomes pure pitable tragedy. The remaining members of her foster family sent her to her Poe relatives in Baltimore. As her kin evidently wanted little to do with her, she was soon left on her own resources--a fate her intelligence, character, and upbringing left her completely unable to handle. She made attempts to gain work as a housekeeper, and was said to walk the streets trying to sell pictures of Edgar to passerby, but her main source of support was "the kindness of strangers," motivated to assist her by admiration for her legendary sibling.
Rosalie spent her last few years in a charity home in Washington, D.C. Her burial was arranged by Edgar Poe fans who, curiously, gave her a tombstone giving her year of birth as 1812--the year after Eliza Poe's death.