Brynlee Endicott Murray Fifth Hour 13 January 2023 Why Lizzie Borden Is Innocent Why would such a kind-hearted person wish to murder their parents? Lizzie Borden was accused of murdering her father and step-mother in Fall River, Massachusetts on August 4th, 1892. Many people believe that Lizzie is guilty. Lizzie is innocent, here is factual evidence: there would have been no time to clean up, previous break-ins happened, no weapon was evident, and she was a good lady. Lizzie couldn’t have killed
Did you know that a young girl named Lizzie Borden was tried for killing her parents? Lizzie Borden, who lived in Fall River MA, was a suspect for the double axe murder of her two parents, Andrew and Abby Borden. No one knows for sure whether it was Lizzie, or a mystery murderer who had killed Andrew and Abby. The Lizzie Borden House is believed to be haunted by the victims of two separate murders taken in that house, but there may be another explanation for the “paranormal” events that have taken
Lizzie called back to her with an upset expression, “Oh, Mrs. Churchill, please come over! Someone has killed Father!” (Gustafson 2). On this seemingly regular morning, Andrew and Abbie Borden were murdered with a hatchet in their home in Fall River, Massachusetts. This murder has left many people encapsulated even hundreds of years later, due to its sense of mystery. Regardless, Lizzie’s pristine appearance after the murders took place,
The most plausible theory is Lizzie Borden the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Borden who allegedly murdered them. To start with, Samantha M. Gavin, a full-time lecturer in Administration of Justice, describes her past relationship with both her father and stepmother,¨Lizzie's relationship with her father and stepmother was unstable¨(Borden, Lizzie 1860-1927). The morose and unstable relationship between Lizzie Borden, her Father, and her Stepmother possibly was the motive for the killings. After the police
exoneration of Lizzie Borden proved that, even in a court of law, women were and still are judged unreasonably because of their sex. On the morning of August 4, 1892, Abby and Andrew Borden were brutally murdered by a hatchet in their home in Fall River, Massachusetts. Detectives at the scene immediately suspected Mr. Borden’s youngest daughter, Lizzie, as she was the only person in the house; however she was not taken into custody
mother Sarah Anthony Borden had passed away from being sickly in March 1863. Lizzie was known for being an odd, awkward child and teen, she got along rather well with animals so that is where she spent most of her time. When attending high school at Fall River she realized she wasn't very much of a scholar so she had withdrawn her junior year. Andrew Borden was a bank president and was an extremely wealthy man although he didn't believe in flaunting his earnings. Emma and Lizzie’s father rarely gave
In Fall River Massachusetts, on August 4, 1892 Lizzie Borden was accused of murdering her father and stepmother. The youngest of three children, Lizzie was thirty-two at the time of the murders1. Her father, Andrew, was a well known banker in the area. Lizzie’s stepmother, Abby, had only been married to Andrew for a couple of years and did not get along well with Lizzie. Lizzie did have a good relationship with her sister, Emma, and her father, but her closest bond was with Emma. Since Emma was the
In August 4, 1892 at 92 Second Street in Fall River, Massachusetts in the Borden house. Andrew Borden and Abby (Durfee Gray) Borden were murdered in their own house. Andrew was murder, while he was sleeping in the sofa. Police were searching in the house and led to discover the dead body of Abby in the upstairs bedroom. Both of them were a victim of a brutal hatchet attack. The possible suspects would be Lizzie Borden, Bridget (the maid), Emma (Lizzie’s older sister), John Morse (guest), and
innocence. She had the motive and the means to kill her parents, raising a thought-provoking question, “Did Lizzie Borden take the ax?” Lizzie Andrew Borden was an American woman born to Andrew Jackson Borden and his wife on July 19, 1860 in Fall River, Massachusetts. Shortly after the death of his wife, Andrew Borden married Abby Durfee Gray Borden, a woman that Lizzie neglected to call “mother”. Lizzie and her older sister Emma were raised in a modest lifestyle, despite Andrew’s generous amount of wealth
murderers. Should they have been accused the way they were, or should it have been different? “Lizzie Borden had an axe, gave her mother forty whacks, when she saw what she had done she gave her father forty-one.” Born July 19, 1860 in Fall River, Massachusetts, Lizzie Borden is the daughter of Andrew Borden and stepdaughter of Abby Borden. She had one sister, Emma Borden. Lizzie’s biological mother was Sarah Borden, who died shortly after Lizzie’s birth. Andrew remarried three years later, to Abby
Lizzie Borden was born on July 19, 1860 and died June 1, 1927. She was an American woman who was tried and acquitted in 1893 for the axe murders of her stepmother and her father in 1892. She lived in Fall River, Massachusetts with her sister, father and stepmother. Lizzie’s mother Sarah Borden was deceased and died when Lizzie was only 3 years old. Lizzie was born into a wealthy family due to her father manufacturing and selling furniture and caskets, and went on to become a successful property developer
The Accused Lizzie Borden Lizzie Andrew Borden is suspected for the murder of her father and stepmother. In my opinion, she DID kill them. The 32-year-old had a motive, which would likely be gaining her father’s inheritance of money and property. She felt was owed to her, since she was his daughter. Her father was divvying up property that was not going to his daughters, it would be going to his wife Lizzie Borden’s stepmother. In addition, Lizzie and her sister didn’t like their stepmother because
was ineffective. After several months, she returned to Maplecroft, but never recovered (Spiering 224). One year later on June 1, 1927 Lizzie suffered drastic complications, Emma had no idea that Lizzie was dying. Lizzie died on June 2nd. The Fall River Globe posted an obituary without any hint of criticism or malice. The New York Times wrote an obituary which was longer and went into great detail about the murders and the trial (Spiering 225). To this day, the Lizzie Borden case is still an
Lizzie Borden was born on July 19, 1860, in Fall River, Massachusetts. Lizzie Borden along with her sister, Emma, lived with their father, Andrew Borden, and stepmother, Abby Borden, throughout adulthood. On August 4, 1892, Andrew and Abby Borden was murdered in their home. Lizzie was arrested and tried for the axe murders. She was discharged in 1893 and lived on in Fall River until she died, on June 1, 1927. The horrific crime created a trial that became a marker in the publication of American
In Fall River, Massachusetts in 1892, a very violent axe murder happened. Abby Borden and Andrew Borden were both struck around 20 times with an axe to the head and face. What caused these murders? No one really knows, but Abby and Andrew's daughters, Emma and Lizzie were forced to do a lot of housework. Lizzie and Emma were being yelled at constantly. Andrew was a very unpleasant, rude man. He had very high expectations that were nearly impossible. The family had a maid, but the Borden parents
“Lizzie Borden took an axe/ Gave her mother forty whacks/ When she saw what she had done/ She gave her father forty-one.” This mysterious rhyme concerning Lizzie Borden quickly suggests events from one of history’s most gruesome and eerie double homicides. Two murders took place in the Borden household, and the events during and after perplexed the nation. Unable to convict a suspect, officials and experts left the murder case unsolved. Over a century later, historians, detectives, and Borden
On the morning of August 4, 1892, Andrew Borden and Abby Borden were murder on their Fall River Home during daylight. At 9.30 am in morning Abby Borden was killed by 19 hits, with an ax to shoulder and to the head (Lizzie Borden). As follow, Andrew Borden is also murder on a couch with 11 hits with an ax to the head at 11 am. The only suspect at the time of the murder was the daughter of Andrew Borden himself, Lizzie Borden who had claimed that she had found her father lying dead on a couch in the
argue whether she was guilty or innocent of the crime for which she was accused. First, let's review the facts of the case. On August 4, 1892, Andrew and Abby Borden, Lizzie's father and stepmother, were brutally murdered in their home in Fall River, Massachusetts. Lizzie was the only other person in the house at the time of the murders, and she became the prime suspect in the investigation. The prosecution argued that Lizzie had a motive for the murders, as
In the summer of 1892 in Fall River, Massachusetts, Andrew and Abby Borden were found hacked to death in their home. Andrew was discovered in a pool of blood on the living room couch, and Abby upstairs, her head smashed to pieces. After providing inconsistent answers to investigators and odd behavior leading up to their death, their daughter, Lizzie Borden was arrested and charged with the double homicide. Nearly a year later Lizzie is found not guilty and acquitted. What lead officials to the arrest
On August 4, 1892, Lizzie Borden was accused of killing her dad and stepmom. On this day, this it would go down as one of America’s biggest and mysterious murders of all time. Many trials and accusations were brought on to Lizzie Borden. The name “Lizzie Borden” would be etched in American murder history. Further on, this day and Lizzie Borden’s life will be revealed in this essay. Lizzie had possible motives that could’ve led to the killings. For instance, many have concluded Lizzie’s father