Edgar Allan Poe
and the Jewel of Peru — a mystery involving old enemies, lost soul-mates,
ornithomancy, and the legendary jewel of Peru— is set primarily in early 1844
in the city of Philadelphia, with some brief forays to the Chachapoya mountains
in Peru. But it all began in Hackney.
I made my home
in that part of London for fourteen years, living in a building that overlooked
London Fields and what was once an immense plant nursery renowned throughout
Europe. I was surprised to discover that my urban neighbourhood had been a
tourist destination in the early nineteenth century due to its enviable
collection of exotic flora and the fact that it boasted the largest hothouse in
the world. The more I researched the Hackney Botanic Nursery Garden, the more I
felt it might be an interesting location for a crime story, and that notion was
a key inspiration for Edgar Allan Poe and the Jewel of Peru.
Some of the
facts that led to the fiction are these: the Hackney Botanic Nursery Garden was
originally founded by Johann Busch, a German immigrant who settled in Hackney
in the mid-eighteenth century. He rented land on Mare Street and supplied
unusual plant specimens to private botanical gardens in Europe. Busch also grew
plants from 'Bartram's boxes', collections of seeds put together by John
Bartram who had a famous nursery in Philadelphia, now a 45-acre National
Historic Landmark called Bartram's Gardens.
When Johann
Busch went to Russia to be Imperial Head Gardener to Catherine the Great in
1771, this connection continued, but through Busch's friend and fellow German émigré
Joachim Conrad Loddiges (1738–1826), who took over the business. Joachim
Loddiges's son George (1786–1846) developed the nursery further with a tropical
rainforest display, a palm house, and hothouse collections of orchids, ferns,
and other exotic plants that fascinated Victorians, thus making it a popular
destination for tourists. George Loddiges also employed plant collectors to
bring back unusual flora and fauna from South America, particularly specimens
for his ornithological collection, part of which is now housed in the Natural
History Museum in London.
One explorer
Loddiges hired was Andrew Mathews (1801—1841) who called himself "a
traveling collector of natural objects". I discovered that Mathews also
gathered seeds and plants for Bartram's Nursery in Philadelphia, but couldn't
find out much more about him except that he married a Peruvian woman, they had
a son, and Andrew Mathews died at the age of forty in the Chachapoya mountains
of Peru, no cause of death given. Was it through accident? Disease? Foul play?
The idea for a murder tale began to ferment…
It wasn't only
Andrew Mathews who had a connection with the borough of Hackney and the city of
Philadelphia. Edgar Allan Poe lived in Stoke Newington from 1815 to 1820 during
his boyhood, and he resided at various addresses in Philadelphia between 1838
and 1844, where he wrote some of his most famous tales. I wondered if Poe had
visited the impressive Hackney Gardens as a child or had gone to see the
Bartram Gardens in Philadelphia whilst living there—and if these locations might
be incorporated into my ideas for a Poe & Dupin mystery trilogy. Given
George Loddiges's immense collection of avian specimens and that Poe's most
famous poem was inspired by Charles Dickens's pet raven Grip, birds seemed to
be a subject worth exploring when concocting a plot.
And so, I
returned to Hackney and created a character named after George Loddiges's
daughter Helena (1818 - 1871), making her a skilled taxidermist, practitioner
of ornithomancy, and an amateur ornithologist who had written a book on the
subject. I reasoned that if Poe were hired by Helena Loddiges to edit the book
(as he was hired to edit The Conchologist's First Book (1839)), the fee would
not only provide the typically impoverished Poe with the means to travel to
London in book I: Edgar Allan Poe and the London Monster, but would also
suggest plot points for book II.
Hackney,
Philadelphia, and the Chachapoya mountains are scenes of fictional crimes
investigated in Edgar Allan Poe and the Jewel of Peru and are three places that
have more connections in truth than one might initially imagine. The hothouses
of the Loddiges plant nursery are long gone, but the Loddiges family vault is
located in the gardens of the Church of St John-at-Hackney. Poe is buried in
Baltimore, but his former home in the Spring Garden section of Philadelphia is
a museum one can visit and Charles Dickens's pet raven Grip (which Dickens had
stuffed by a taxidermist after his death) is entombed in a glass box on display
in the Philadelphia Free Library. Andrew Mathews died in the Chachapoyas, but
how and precisely where is lost to history… as is the mysterious jewel of Peru.
Edgar Allan Poe
and the Jewel of Peru by Karen Lee Street is published by Point Blank, paperback
£8.99.
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