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The Southern Literary Messenger was the most important periodical published in the South and, in spite of occasional troubles, one of the most successful. It was for this magazine that Poe first launched what was to be a lifelong career as an editor and magazinist.
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The prospectus for The Southern Literary Messenger was published as early as May of 1834, when it appeared in The Daily National Intelligencer (Washington, D.C.), XXII, No. 6637, Thursday, May 15, 1834, p. 3, col. 6. The Prospectus is dated “May 1, 1834” (Quoted in Jackson, Contributors and Contributions to the SLM, 1936, pp. xi-xii).
Full Title: The Southern Literary Messenger: Devoted to Every Department of Literature and the Fine Arts (1834-1845); The Southern and Western Literary Messenger and Review: Devoted to Every Department of Literature and the Fine Arts (1846-1847); The Southern Literary Messenger: Devoted to Every Department of Literature and the Fine Arts (1848-1864); The Southern Literary Messenger: Devoted to Literature, Science and Art (1856-1864)
Issued: The Southern Literary Messenger: Vols. I-XXXVI (August 1834 - June 1864) Several intermitent issues were not published: September, October and November 1834; December 1836; February, August and October 1840, with March, September and November being double issues; August 1841. A few issues cross months: May-June 1841; October-November 1851; and November-December 1863.
Editor(s): James Ewell Heath (August 1834 - April 1835); Edward Vernon Sparhawk (May 1835 - July 1835); Thomas Willis White (August 1834 - December 1842); Edgar Allan Poe (December 1835 - January 1837) (White dismissed Poe as editor about December 3, 1836, but he officially retired with the January issue. White remained generally friendly towards Poe, and Poe remained a contributor until his own death in 1849); Thomas Willis White (February 1839 - about January 1840); Thomas Willis White and Matthew Fontaine Maury (about January 1840 - September 1842); Matthew Fontaine Maury (October 1842 - July 1843) (with assistance from White's son-in-law, Peter Dudley Bernard) (White died on January 23, 1843); Benjamin Blake Minor (August 1843 - October 1847); John Ruben Thompson (November 1847 - May 1860); George William Bagby (June 1860 - January 1864); Frank Heath Alfriend (February 1864 - June 1864);
Publisher(s): Thomas Willis White (1834-1843) (White died in 1843); Benjamin Blake Minor (1843-1847); Macfarlane & Fergusson (1847); John Reuben Thompson (1847-1852); Macfarlane & Fergusson (1853-1863); Wedderburn & Alfriend (1864)
Location: Richmond, VA
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Issued in illustrated paper wrappers, generally a blue-green color. Most surviving copies were accumulated into full volumes, and rebound in cloth or leather.
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There are many copies of the Southern Literary Messenger, although the early volumes are somewhat scarce, and Poe-related issues in the original paper wrappers are quite rare. A few copies are worthy of particular note:
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[S:0 - JAS] - Edgar Allan Poe Society of Baltimore - Editions - The Southern Literary Messenger