Lizzie Andrew Borden(1860-1927)
- Writer
Lizzie Borden has mystified and fascinated crime buffs for over a
century. Few cases in American history have attracted as much attention
as the hatchet murders and the unlikely defendant: a church-going,
respectable "spinster" daughter charged with parricide, a crime worthy
of Classical Greek tragedy. On August 4, 1892, a heavy, hot summer day
in Massachusetts, a maid discovered the bodies of Andrew Borden, 70, a
wealthy developer, and his second wife Abby, a short obese woman of 64.
Mr. Borden's face had been struck 11 times while he slept on the couch;
Mrs. Borden had been struck 19 times from the back. A broken hatchet
was found in the basement. The day after the Bordens' funeral, a
neighbor observed Lizzie burning a stained dress in the kitchen stove.
The neighbor's testimony prompted Lizzie to be charged with the
murders. The chaotic and stumbling murder investigation against Lizzie
was circumstantial, without incriminating physical evidence or clear
motive. After a trial in June 1893 and one hour of jury deliberations,
Lizzie was found not guilty on all charges. Lizzie and her sister Emma
moved into a 13-room stone Victorian house named Maplecroft. In 1904,
she met actress Nance O'Neil, and the two became inseparable, prompting
rumors of a romantic relationship. Lizzie died at age 67, after a long
illness. Emma coincidentally died nine days later, after a fall down
the stairs of her house. They were buried together in the family plot,
along with their mother, stepmother, and father. Despite popular belief
of Lizzie's guilt, it remains technically an unsolved
crime.