Background
Andrew Jackson Poe was born on March 2, 1851 in Columbiana County, Ohio.
Andrew Jackson Poe was born on March 2, 1851 in Columbiana County, Ohio.
He was the fifth of ten children born to Adam Poe and Lucy Todd Poe. The Poe family lived and worked on a farm in Beaver County, Pennsylvania. Pfau’s sons Adam and Andrew were famed for their skirmishes with Native Americans in southern Beaver County.
Both men were known as fearless fighters, and the first Andrew Poe is reputed to have slain the Wyandot Indian Chief Bigfoot in 1781.
The brothers’ exploits were detailed in volume II of Theodore Roosevelt’s book, The Winning of the West from the Alleghenies to the Mississippi, 1777 - 1783. Poe is a second cousin of the West Point graduate and general Orlando Metcalfe Poe.
Poe was not known to have married or had children. He traveled fairly extensively, paying for food and lodgings with his paintings.
From 1892 to 1893, he lived in Saint Louis, Missouri.
Family lore held that his decorative painting adorns portions of the Union Station in Saint Louis. Little is known of his adult life other than the fact that around the turn of the century, when he was in his early 50s, he entered the Beaver County Home, a poorhouse for the destitute, alcoholics and other indigents. There he was befriended by the home’s administrator, John Wesley Nippert.
Nippert used his own money to buy Poe paints, canvases and other art supplies.
By or upon Poe’s death on November 11, 1911, about forty Poe paintings, mostly oils, were in Nippert’s possession. Although Poe painted the occasional still life, his primary focus was on landscapes.
His work usually depicted scenes of Beaver County, Pennsylvania and the adjoining Columbiana County, Ohio. He occasionally noted his artistic debt to other, better-known painters by signing his own name and date in addition to the name of the artist he was copying.
All of his existing pieces are dated between 1905 and 1907.
Poe died November 11, 1920 in Beaver County, probably at the Beaver County Home. He is buried in the Georgetown, Pennsylvania cemetery.