His foster father had a disagreement with Poe and told him to leave the home.
Maria Clemm was Edgar Allan Poe's aunt and the mother of Virginia Clemm, Poe's wife later on. When Poe was not doing well financially, she took him into her home so he would have a place to live. Maria Clemm gave Poe financial support at times when he needed it.
In 1839, Edgar Allan Poe lived in Philadelphia with his aunt Maria Clemm and her daughter Virginia Clemm. He published his collection of short stories, "Tales of the Grotesque and Arabesque," that year.
After leaving the military, Edgar Allan Poe went to live with his aunt, Maria Clemm, and her daughter, Virginia. This family arrangement provided Poe with a home and support as he pursued his writing career. Clemm and Virginia were important figures in Poe's personal life and provided him with stability during his tumultuous career.
Edgar Allan Poe and Virginia Eliza Clemm Poe lived in various places throughout their marriage, including Baltimore, Richmond, and Philadelphia. They also spent time in New York, where Edgar worked as an editor and writer. They were known to move frequently due to financial struggles and other personal circumstances.
Because he wasn't dead at the time.
Edgar Allan Poe was 27 when he married his 13 year old cousin Virginia Eliza Clemm. They were related because David Poe Jr (Edgar's father) and Maria Clemm (Virginia's mother) were brother and sister. Marrying at a young age was quite common considering that not many medicines were available at that time and you didn't live very long. After eleven years of marriage, Virginia died of tuberculosis.
Richmond Virginia with his now foster parents, John and Frances Allan
Poe lived in England for a time.
Edgar Allan Poe's family did not take him to Baltimore, Maryland to live with his grandparents. Poe's older brother, William Henry Leonard Poe was taken to Baltimore, but Edgar went to Richmond, Virginia to live with the Allan family. Both of Poe's parents, David Poe, Jr. and Eliza Arnold Hopkins Poe, died in late 1811.
It depends on your point of view, did he have money? no was he broke? no, he had stuff to live for, life and nature,
Poe and Sarah Elmira Royster were secretly engaged to be married, but her father refused to permit her to marry Poe. She later married Alexander Shelton, but he died in 1844. Poe married Virginia Clemm, but she died in 1847. In 1848 Poe called on his former fiance and proposed marriage, but she did not accept.She had been secretly engaged to Poe in their youth, but her father would not allow her to marry Poe. She then married Alexander B. Shelton, who died in 1844. After Poe's wife Virginia died in 1847, Poe called on his former fiancee and asked her to marry him. At first she declined but then she accepted. Poe died before they were married.
Poe lived most of his life in Richmond, Virginia, where he grew up until he went to the University of Virginia for one year, except for five years which were spent in England and Scotland. He also lived in New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore and Boston, but not for as many years as he lived in Virginia.