Showing posts with label Lizzie Borden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lizzie Borden. Show all posts

Friday, July 25, 2025

Lizzie Borden's Forty Whacks: Fact or Fiction Edition


By Jennifer Uhlarik

 

I’m sure most of us have heard of Lizzie Borden, the woman best known for having been accused of and tried for the Massachusetts axe murders of her parents in the 1890s. Perhaps you know of her for no other reason than the oft-repeated playground rhyme that kids skipped rope to. Or maybe you’ve read of her yourself…there have been several great blog posts done on her here at Heroes, Heroines, and History across the years, as well as many other places. Or…<shiver> maybe you’re one of the brave souls who so loves this macabre historical murder that you’ve stayed in the supposedly haunted Borden house turned into a Bed & Breakfast.


Lizzie Borden

For those who don’t know of Lizzie Borden, here are the basic facts: On August 4, 1892, Andrew and Abby Borden were discovered in their home, deceased, each apparently killed with a hatchet or an axe. Living in the house with them at the time of their deaths were 32-year-old daughter Lizzie, her older sister Emma (age 41), and Bridget Sullivan, the 25-year-old live-in maid who’d immigrated to America from Ireland. Also having stayed in the Borden’s home the night prior was one of Lizzie’s maternal relatives, John Morse.


The Borden House,
Fall River, Massachusetts

Present at breakfast on the morning of the murder were Abby and Andrew, Mr. Morse, and Miss Sullivan. According to my research, neither Lizzie nor Emma ate with the family that fateful morning. Following breakfast, Mr. Morse and Andrew talked about some family business until about 8:30 a.m., then Morse departed to attend to some other errands. Somewhere between 9 a.m. and 10:30 a.m., Abby went about her usual house chores, and somewhere after 9 a.m., Andrew took his usual morning walk. It is thought that during his walk, Abby was murdered as she made up the guest room bed. Upon returning from his walk around 10:30 a.m., Andrew struggled to open the door, so he knocked. Miss Sullivan testified during the trial that she found the door jammed, and that as she opened it, she heard Lizzie laughing from the top of the stairs, though Lizzy denied that fact. According to the forensic investigation, Abby had already been murdered in the guest room by this time, though she’d not been discovered. Andrew went to the sitting room to nap on the couch, and as he slept, was also killed. As the history goes, moments after 11 a.m., Lizzie called out to Miss Sullivan in her third-floor bedroom to come quickly, someone had killed her father, and when Miss Sullivan arrived in the room, Andrew’s blood was still flowing, indicating the blows had been delivered very recently.


Abby Borden's body, 
lying dead in the guest room



Andrew Borden's body on the 
sitting room couch

 

Those are the basic facts of the case, but let’s look more deeply—at both the childhood rhyme and other details of the case—and see what’s fact and what is fiction. 

 


Fact or Fiction: The Childhood Rhyme

 

As the rhyme goes…

“Lizzie Borden took an axe,

and gave her mother forty whacks;

when she saw what she had done,

she gave her father forty-one.”

 

Let’s take it line by line.

 

“Lizzie Borden took an axe…”

 


Uncertain. During her trial, Lizzie was acquitted of Andrew and Abby Borden’s murders, so no one knows who the real culprit was. Perhaps it was Lizzie and the jury got it wrong—or maybe the real culprit got away with murder. Twice.

 

“And gave her mother forty whacks…”

 


Fiction: This is actually false on two fronts. Abby Borden was Lizzie’s step-mother. Her mother had passed away some time before this. Also, Abby was struck about seventeen or eighteen times, not forty.

 


“When she saw what she had done,

she gave her father forty-one.”

 


Fiction: While he was Lizzie’s father, and not a step-parent as above, he received about ten or eleven blows with the murder weapon, not the forty-one chanted in the rhyme.

 



~~~~~





Fact or Fiction: The police investigated the Borden murders for possible poisonings.

 

Fact. Several days before their deaths, everyone in the household had fallen ill, and Abby said she thought someone had poisoned them because her husband was disliked among the neighbors and townsfolk. During the autopsies, both Abby and Andrew’s stomachs were removed and thoroughly checked for poison. None was found. The more likely cause of the bout of illness days before their murder was mutton that had been left out too long and allowed to spoil.


~~~~~



Fact or Fiction: Lizzie destroyed a dress in the first days after her parents’ murders.

 


Fact. More than one witness saw Lizzie tearing or cutting up one of her dresses and tossing the pieces in the stove to be burned up, though she was not stopped from doing so. When asked why she was destroying the dress, she said it was old and had paint stains on it.


~~~~~




 

Fact or Fiction: Lizzie was denied her right to an attorney.

 


Part Fact/Part Fiction. If you’ve watched any police drama on TV or the big screen, you have heard the “Miranda Rights” quoted—the right to remain silent, to have an attorney, and if you can’t afford one, to have one appointed for you. However, those rights were not officially created until 1966, decades after Lizzie Borden’s case. So she was never promised an attorney or her choosing or the court’s.

 

Despite that fact, Lizzie found herself facing an inquest, and she did ask that a family attorney be present. It was wise of her to request this, since she’d been consistently given morphine for her nerves after the murders. And yes…fact…she was denied the requested attorney for the inquest due to a Massachusetts rule that said inquests were to remain private. Poor Lizzie was erratic, likely from the morphine, and changed her story multiple times. She sometimes refused to answer questions, even if those questions might have helped her case. Thankfully for her, her testimony from the inquest was not allowed in the actual trial (where she was allowed to have an attorney—and in fact, had three).


~~~~~




 

Fact or Fiction: An eerily similar axe murder happened in the same town as the Borden Murders days before Lizzie’s trial began.

 


Fact. Lizzie’s trial was days away from beginning when Bertha Manchester was found in her home, also hacked with an axe or hatchet, in very similar style to Andrew and Abby Borden. A Portuguese immigrant was later found guilty of the Manchester murder, though apparently, they couldn’t not place the man in Fall River, Massachusetts, during the time of the Borden murders. Despite that fact, it certainly helped sway the jury that another, uncannily similar murder was just committed—and not by Lizzie.

 

This is by no means an exhaustive list of all the facts of the case. There are many more details that must be considered to come to any sort of informed conclusion on who really killed Mr. and Mrs. Borden. What I have presented here are some of the oft-misquoted, interesting, or otherwise bizarre details that accompany this case.

 

It’s Your Turn: Had you heard of Lizzie Borden? Do you suspect she is the real culprit or do you think someone else committed these heinous crimes? If so, who—and why do you believe that?

 



Jennifer Uhlarik
 discovered western novels at twelve when she swiped the only “horse” book from her brother’s bookshelf. Across the next decade, she devoured westerns and fell in love with the genre. While attaining a B.A. in writing from the University of Tampa, she began penning her own story of the Old West. She has finaled in and won numerous writing competitions and appeared on various best-seller lists. Besides writing, she’s been a business owner, a schoolteacher, a marketing director, a historical researcher, a publisher, and a full-time homemaker. She lives near Tampa, Florida, with her husband and fur children.

 

 

Love and Order: A Three-Part Old West Romantic Mystery

 

Wanted: 

Family, Love, and Justice


One Old West Mystery Solved Throughout Three Short Romantic Stories


Separated as children when they were adopted out to different families from an orphan train, the Braddock siblings have each grown up and taken on various jobs within law enforcement and criminal justice.

 

Youngest child, Callie, has pushed past her insecurities to pursue a career as a Pinkerton agent. Middle child, Andi, has spent years studying law under her adoptive father’s tutelage. And the eldest and only son, Rion, is a rough-and-tumble bounty hunter. 

 

When the hunt for a serial killer with a long history of murders reunites the brother and sisters in Cambria Springs, Colorado, they find themselves not only in a fight for justice, but also a fight to keep their newly reunited family intact. How will they navigate these challenges when further complicated by unexpected romances?

 

Wednesday, June 25, 2025

The First Borden Murders

 

By Jennifer Uhlarik

 

If you’ve heard of Lizzie Borden—raise your hand!


Most of us probably have—at least by the oft-quoted schoolyard rhyme about the woman who delivered forty whacks of an ax to her mother, then another forty-one to her father. However, Lizzie was not the first Borden whose name was associated with murder. Four and a half decades before the murders of Andrew and Abby Borden (father and step-mother of Lizzie), the first Borden murders occurred.


Lizzie Borden

 

Lawdwick Borden’s First Marriage

 

On March 14, 1812, Lawdwick Borden entered the world—the brother of the man who would become Lizzie Borden’s grandfather. From a well-to-do family, he eventually opened a planning business to compliment his brother, Cook’s, lumber business.

 

At twenty-one years old, Lawdwick married the first of his four wives. His union with Maria Briggs started happily enough, though that happiness wouldn’t last. Within their brief five years together, they brought two children into the world—and lost both in less than a year from each of their births. And in their fifth year of marriage, Maria died also. So by age 26, Lawdwick had already suffered the loss of a spouse and two children—all to illnesses.

 

But that wasn’t where his losses ended. Indeed, things were about to get quite a bit worse.

 

The Horrific Second Marriage

 

Six years after Maria died, on March 16, 1843, Lawdwick married Eliza Darling—his second wife. Within a year and a half, they welcomed their first child, Maria, to the family. Two years later, along came their second daughter, Eliza, and two years after that, their son Holder completed their family. This should have been a joyous time for the growing family, but Lawdwick’s wife suffered with “melancholy” after her children’s births, likely a case of what we call postpartum depression today.

 

If you’re not aware, many women suffer some small form of the “baby blues” after giving birth. This is usually a brief period (two weeks or less) of mood swings, trouble eating, trouble sleeping, mild anxiety, crying, and other such symptoms. But sometimes the blues don’t abate within a couple of weeks. Today, we know this as postpartum depression, a condition marked by depression and severe mood swings, trouble bonding with the new baby, the mother’s withdrawal from family and friends, excessive crying, extreme irritability, anger, and even hopelessness. In truly severe cases, the mother can fantasize about harming herself or her baby—or even make such attempts.

 

News article announcing Eliza's murder of her children
and her own suicide.

The articles I have read on Eliza Darling Borden didn’t detail her symptoms, but I can imagine she must have been plagued by all of these and more to do what she ultimately did. Around the time that Holder was six months old and little Eliza was two, their mother was in the grip of a madness she couldn’t break free of. On a given morning, she waited for their young maid to leave the house on an outside chore. At that time, she took little Eliza and Holder to the cellar of the house at #96 Second Street in Fall River, Massachusetts, and drown her two youngest children in the cellar’s cistern. I have found no details as to why Maria was not also drowned that day, but the oldest daughter survived.

 

After drowning her children, Eliza took one of her husband’s straight razors and did herself in by cutting her own throat. Some accounts have her taking her life in the same cellar where her children died, while others say she walked back upstairs before ending her life.


Eliza Borden's grave marker.



 

Later Marriages

 

I have to give Lawdwick Borden credit. After losing two wives and four children—two by murder—I am not sure I would have had the strength to marry again. But Lawdwick did. His third wife was yet another woman named Eliza! (Did I mention I couldn’t have married again? I really  don’t think I could’ve married another by the same name)! The third wife—and second Eliza—died also, leaving poor Lawdwick to marry his final wife, Ruhama. 

 

Lawdwick and Ruhama shared a number of years together before his death on October 6, 1874. She survived him by about five years, ultimately succumbing to cancer in 1879.

 

The Surviving Child

 

You might be wondering what happened to the surviving child of Lawdwick and Eliza Darling Borden. Maria went on to lead a full life, marrying twice herself. Her first marriage lasted only a handful of years and ended in divorce. However, her second marriage to a man named John Chace, produced two children, one of which survived into adulthood. The other died early from illness. Maria lived out her days in Fall River.

 

The House Next Door

 

Interestingly, Maria was a just an infant when her father took a portion of the land where his house was situated and build a second home. The home’s address was #92 Second Street, Fall River, Massachusetts. In the early days after it was built, that house was occupied by Charles and Hannah Trafton, who welcomed Charles Jr. to their family. But only shortly after Charles Jr’s birth, Hannah succumbed to tuberculosis and the baby died of an unknown illness. Charles Sr. married again and lived in that house next to Lawdwick’s family until 1872—when the house was sold to Andrew Borden, father of Lizzie and Emma Borden. 

 

Check back next month for more about the murders of Andrew and Abby Borden in that very house.

 

It’s Your Turn: Were you aware that the murders of Lizzie Borden’s parents were not the first suspicious deaths in the Borden family tree? In your opinion, what is the saddest part of the original Borden murders?

 


Jennifer Uhlarik
 discovered western novels at twelve when she swiped the only “horse” book from her brother’s bookshelf. Across the next decade, she devoured westerns and fell in love with the genre. While attaining a B.A. in writing from the University of Tampa, she began penning her own story of the Old West. She has finaled in and won numerous writing competitions and appeared on various best-seller lists. Besides writing, she’s been a business owner, a schoolteacher, a marketing director, a historical researcher, a publisher, and a full-time homemaker. She lives near Tampa, Florida, with her husband and fur children.

 

 

Love and Order: A Three-Part Old West Romantic Mystery

Available now from your favorite bookseller

 

Wanted: 

Family, Love, and Justice


One Old West Mystery Solved Throughout Three Short Romantic Stories


Separated as children when they were adopted out to different families from an orphan train, the Braddock siblings have each grown up and taken on various jobs within law enforcement and criminal justice.

 

Youngest child, Callie, has pushed past her insecurities to pursue a career as a Pinkerton agent. Middle child, Andi, has spent years studying law under her adoptive father’s tutelage. And the eldest and only son, Rion, is a rough-and-tumble bounty hunter. 

 

When the hunt for a serial killer with a long history of murders reunites the brother and sisters in Cambria Springs, Colorado, they find themselves not only in a fight for justice, but also a fight to keep their newly reunited family intact. How will they navigate these challenges when further complicated by unexpected romances?