Lizzie Borden House |
The murders of Andrew and
Abby Borden in 1892 are two of the most gruesome in American history.
The Borden’s lived in Fall
River, Massachusetts with Andrew’s two daughters, Emma, and Lizzie from a
previous marriage.
Lizzie Borden |
The two were discovered
“hacked to death” with an ax. Lizzie became the authorities primary murder
suspect and was tried and acquitted in a two-week sensationalized trial.
No one else was ever accused,
and these murders remain unsolved. But to this day many believe that Lizzie
actually did murder her father and stepmother.
Much of the evidence that
pointed to Lizzie being the murderess, for some reason, was ignored or even found
to be inadmissible during her trial.
Lizzie did not appreciate her
frugal father, and she and her sister had an open disdain for Abby—calling her
“Mrs. Borden.”
Lizzie Borden House today. |
The sisters just before the
murders had fought with their father over money matters—they were due to
inherit over seven and a half million dollars—in today’s value-- at their
father’s death.
Lizzie was seen burning one
of her dresses, by a friend, that she claimed to be paint-stained, just days
after the murders. The suspected murder weapon, a broken hatchet, was found
hidden in the home’s basement.
The police, when they
questioned Lizzie after the murders, found her statements to be “inconsistent,”
and she provided several changing alibis.
Andrew and Abby Borden |
The day of the murders, Emma
was away from the Borden house, and the family maid, Maggie was outside
cleaning windows. Lizzie was home—she claimed to be in a barn in back of the
house looking for fishing tackle and eating pears.
The police found this barn so
hot—they felt no one could have stayed in it for twenty minutes, let alone for
an hour and a half.
The Borden house is not that
large, but Lizzie claimed not to hear or see anything.
There were ninety minutes
between the two murders, and the police found that it was odd that a murderer
would stay around for this long-- and then not to have been seen by Lizzie or
the maid?
But most of this was not
taken into account at the trial. When the Borden’s crushed skulls were
exhibited, Lizzie fainted. The all-male jury was sympathetic—after all, how
could a petite, Sunday school teacher do this?
Today the Lizzie Borden house
is a museum, and a bed & breakfast. Visitors can take day tours or stay
overnight. Tour guides, visitors, and paranormal teams all feel it is haunted.
Bodies of Andrew and Abby Borden found murdered. |
Andrew Borden was murdered as
he napped on the settee in the family parlor. Abby was killed in the family
guest room upstairs—she had nineteen blows to the head.
Strange mist captured on camera in Borden guest room. |
These two rooms have a lot of
activity. Most who enter this house, that has been restored to its 19th-century
appearance, report feelings of overwhelming sadness.
Tour guides mention being
touched by unseen hands. Many report something tugged at their clothes.
There have been reports of
people seeing the apparitions of Andrew, Abby, and Lizzie in the home. Strange
mists have also been observed.
There are also reports of something unseen whispering in people's ears.
One of the strangest
phenomena to happen occurs by the bed in the guest room where Abby Borden was
killed.
A strange image caught in a mirror at Lizzie Borden house. |
Countless people have closed
their eyes and stood on the spot where she died. They all report feeling as if
someone shoved or pushed them on the back. Others feel a force coming through
the floor that tries to tip them.
Witnesses also mention hearing
children’s laughter in the homes attic rooms.
One folktale belief is that
the spirits in the house can be “bribed” to leave the living alone.
Visitors often place a few
coins on Mr. Borden’s bureau. While the young spirits respond best to small toy
offerings.
The following video is a good
summary of the tensions in the Borden family, as well as an explanation for why
there are young spirits in the house.
My gut feeling tells me she did kill her parents. What a creepy, scary and sad event.
ReplyDeleteThe irony is the townsfolk seemed to support her through the trial but afterward, they all seemed to think she did it.
ReplyDelete