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  1. May 3, 2024 · An 1890 portrait of Lizzie Borden Public domain via Wikimedia Commons. The Lizzie Borden murder case is one of the most famous in American criminal history. New England’s major crime of the ...

    • Lizzie Borden Didn’T Give Anyone “Forty Whacks.”
    • The Bordens’ Actual Skulls appeared in The Courtroom During Lizzie’s Trial.
    • After She Was Acquitted, Lizzie Borden and Her Sister Inherited A Fortune.
    • Borden Changed Her Name from Lizzie to Lizbeth.
    • Lizzie Borden Had A Relationship with A Famous Actress.
    • Lizzie Borden Was Eventually Buried with Abby and Andrew.
    • Christina Ricci Played A Reimagined Version of Lizzie Borden.
    • The Infamous Borden House Was Recently Sold—And History Buffs Are worried.
    • The Lizzie Borden Rock Opera Could Be Coming to A Theatre Near you.

    First, a little Borden background: In 1892, the year of the murders, 32-year-old Lizzie Borden and her older sister Emma lived in a house on Second Street in Fall River, Massachusetts, with their father, Andrew, and stepmother, Abby. (Their biological mother, Sarah Borden, had died when Lizzie was 2 years old.) The sisters lived relatively quiet li...

    Aside from the Bordens’ maid, Bridget, Lizzie was the only one in the home when her parents were found dead; that, coupled with her odd behavior after the murders, caused authorities to believe she had done the deed. She was arrested on August 11. The trial, which began in June 1893, made headlines around the U.S. On the second day, Borden fainted ...

    After Borden was acquitted of the murders, she and Emma inherited their father’s considerable fortune, which was said to be worth more than $8 millionin today’s money. You might think the sisters would be eager to get out of town after the trial, but they stayed put, and even purchased a 14-room mansion (which was eventually named Maplecroft) on Fr...

    Perhaps wanting to distance herself from the whole sordid affair, or wanting to appear more sophisticated to match her newfound wealth, Borden changed her namein 1905. Most locals still called her Lizzie, but it was “Lizbeth” that was inscribed on her tombstone.

    With her fortune, Borden regularly went to the theatre in New York, Boston, and Washington, D.C., and socialized with newfound friends who were no doubt intrigued by her notoriety. One new acquaintance was Nance O’Neil, an actress so talented that critics called her “the American Bernhardt.” The inseparable duo was rumored to have been romantically...

    Almost two years after the murders, Lizzie and Emma purchased a 9-foot family headstone made of blue granite for a whopping $2124 (more than $60,000 today.) When the stone was being installed, the Borden sisters came to the cemetery to inspect it, “They alighted to view the work, Lizzie glancing at the stone, and immediately reentered the carriage,...

    In 2014, Christina Ricci played Lizzie in the Lifetime movie Lizzie Borden Took an Ax that was followed by The Lizzie Borden Chronicles, an eight-episode series that imaginedwhat Lizzie’s life would have been like if she did, in fact, commit the murders—and then went on to commit a whole lot more.

    Since 2004, the home has operated as a bed and breakfast, allowing patrons to stay in the very bedroom where Abby Borden met her grisly end. But a few months ago, the house on Second Street in Fall River was soldto Lance Zaal, an entrepreneur who owns a company called U.S. Ghost Adventures. His plans include hosting hatchet-throwing contests in the...

    Lizzie: The Musical has been in production since 2009. According to its website, the musicalis “set to a blistering rock score with a sound owing less to Sondheim and Andrew Lloyd Webber than to Bikini Kill, the Runaways, and Heart,” and explores the secrets that were coming to a head in the Borden household before the murders. It continues to be p...

    • Stacy Conradt
  2. Aug 1, 1992 · The more popular question today, however, is why Lizzie, to paraphrase an old ditty, gave her stepmother 40 whacks and her father 41. Did Lizzie slaughter her parents for an inheritance?

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  4. Signature. Lizzie Andrew Borden (July 19, 1860 – June 1, 1927) was an American woman who was tried and acquitted of the August 4, 1892 axe murders of her father and stepmother in Fall River, Massachusetts. [1] No one else was charged in the murders, and, despite ostracism from other residents, Borden spent the remainder of her life in Fall River.

  5. Feb 4, 1992 · Lizzie Borden “gave her mother 40 whacks; when she saw what she had done, she gave her father 41.” “That little ditty is interesting because it’s really a fallacy,” said Mr. Martins.

  6. Jun 20, 2017 · And gave her mother forty whacks. When she saw what she had done. She gave her father forty-one. The murder of Andrew Borden (Lizzie’s father) and Abby Borden (Lizzie’s stepmother) occurred on 4 August 1892, in the family home the two shared with Lizzie and her sister Emma. Andrew was killed by 11 blows with an axe or hatchet, and Abby by ...

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