After Dark: Myths, Misdeeds & the Paranormal - Innocent or Axe Murderer? Lizzie Borden
Episode Date: August 5, 2024It's one of the most infamous trials in American history, Lizzie Borden's story is breathtaking even today. In 1893 she was accused of using an axe to murder her father and step-mother. The case obses...sed America and despite evidence against her, Lizzie was let off. Was that justice?Maddy Pelling tells Anthony Delaney the story today.Edited by Tomos Delargy. Produced by Freddy Chick. Senior Producer is Charlotte Long.Enjoy unlimited access to award-winning original documentaries that are released weekly and AD-FREE podcasts. Sign here for up to 50% for 3 months using code AFTERDARK.You can take part in our listener survey here.After Dark: Myths, Misdeeds & the Paranormal is a History Hit podcast
Transcript
Discussion (0)
After Dark listeners, we need you to vote for us for the Listener's Choice Award at this year's British Podcast Awards.
You can do that simply by going to the website, BritishPodcastAwards.com forward slash voting and voting for After Dark.
And lads, this is important. Don't forget to confirm your vote or it doesn't count. We wouldn't want that now, would we?
it doesn't count and we wouldn't want that now, would we? overage protection so you can go all out without going over. Don't wait, our back to school offers are only available for a limited time. Go to Fido.ca or a Fido store near you and save all semester long. Fido...at your side. Canada may be
known for its landscapes and friendly people but beneath the surface lies a
darker side of crime, history, and the paranormal. Since 2017, the award-winning Dark Poutine
podcast has explored the shadowy corners of the Great White North and beyond, delivering
chilling tales from a uniquely Canadian perspective. Hosted by Mike Brown and Matthew Stockton
with over 300 episodes and fresh releases every Monday, Dark Poutine is your weekly
ticket to the creepier side of Canada. Listen After Dark, and today we're focusing on the
case of Lizzie Borden, one of the most famous murderers in American history.
June 5th, 1893. We're in New Bedford, Massachusetts, standing in the corner of a crowded courtroom.
We've had to jostle our way in. It's loud in here.
Men and women are discussing the case with a kind of electric excitement.
There's debate.
The man behind us waves his hand enthusiastically in the air,
as though trying to hammer home his point.
His friend shakes his head in disagreement.
The jury, two rows of near-identical men in three-piece suits,
their faces dressed with whiskers and mustaches,
and their waists glinting with pocket-watches, look grim, and so they should, for the task
is not an easy one. They must decide on the guilt or innocence of a young woman. In a case so ghastly, the details of it make everyone, from factory
workers to magistrates in the industrial town where it happened, blush in horror. Quite
suddenly a hush falls in the room. A door swings loudly open and through it comes the accused herself. She is small and neat, dressed
in black, with an elegant pin fastened high at her throat. In her hand she carries a bouquet
of fresh flowers, the petals trembling slightly as she steps up to the dock to take her place.
steps up to the dock to take her place. Over the next few days, this apparently demure, respectable woman will be fighting for her life. The question is, did she take those This is After Dark.
I'm Antony.
And I'm Maddie.
And today we are delving into one of the most notorious cases, as I said at the outset,
in American history. It's a locked room mystery, a story of horrible violence, and then at
its heart, a seemingly glamorous, if that's the right word, but strange young woman. It
is, of course, the case of Lizzie Borden.
You might remember that in June we had an episode about the murder trial of Polly Bidine,
aka the Witch of New York.
And that's a fascinating case too.
And our guest was Alex Hortus and he told us about Polly's trial and how sensational
it was until it was eclipsed by Lizzie Borden.
So this is going to be really interesting and go back and listen to that Polly Bidyan
case if you haven't already heard it because it really is fascinating and it sets up the
context for what's about to unfold in the Lizzie Borden case.
So speaking of context, Maddie, set the scene for us.
I believe we are in 1892, America in 1892.
We are indeed. I got really carried away researching this year, loads happened, but it's now become a
bit of a running joke in my household. I got so excited that I started telling my husband about
all the things that happened in 1892. But I led with the fact that the first escalator was
installed that year in Coney Island. And he laughed at me so much. And now anything that I say
is interesting, he says, was it as interesting as the escalator situation in 1892.
So that is also a terrible story. I am with Matt on this. Escalators do not make for the first lead.
You should have picked something else. I mean, the first fingerprint bureau is in my notes.
That comes next. That's way better. I know it really is. It really is. So I'm sorry to
escalate funds out there, but that was quite a way better. Yeah, I know. It really is. It really is. So I'm sorry to escalator fans out there,
but that was quite a boring opening. Yeah, so there's so much that changes. We're early on
in the final decade of the 19th century. The world is changing hugely. So we do have the first
escalators at Coney Island. We've also got Rudolf Diesel patenting his engine. We've got, as you say, the first fingerprinting bureau opens in Buenos Aires, which of course,
we're not going to see Buenos Aires in the story, but interesting to think about these
advances and policing taking place.
Not necessarily in America.
In the world of sport, something you and I are obviously very passionate about, Liverpool
Football Club is founded and in the US the first
basketball game is played in public and for anyone who didn't know it's at the YMCA and it's played
between its students and the faculty there. There's lots of social change happening. So Yale
University admits its first woman to graduate school there And in Louisiana, a mixed race man called Homer
Plessy is arrested for sitting in a whites only train carriage in protest of, of course,
racial segregation, which is absolutely fascinating and quite early on, I would say. In terms
of culture and politics, we've got the first ever film studios being set up. Have a guess
where you think they would be
without looking at the notes in front of you?
I mean, you would imagine they're going to be LA, I guess.
So they're in Melbourne, in Australia, interestingly. Yeah, I did not know that.
Well, there's quite a big film industry in Melbourne, actually, even now, or in Australia,
at least. In London, we get the first Sherlock Holmes adventure published in a Strand magazine.
Also in London, we've got the general election.
We have two elections taking place in this year, a little bit like this year, in fact,
the year we're currently living in.
We've got the British general election, and it's a conservative and liberal unionist
coalition that loses its majority and a liberal government comes in.
So not a terribly dissimilar situation to the one that we find
ourselves in now. And in the US, there's a presidential election. And this is really
interesting. So Grover Cleveland comes back into office for a second term, but they're
not back to back terms and he's the only president thus far to serve two nonconsecutive
terms. Of course, Donald Trump would be the second if
he is elected later this year. So there's a lot of parallels to our own time. It's a
feeling of in the 1890s, lots of changes happening. The recognizable 20th century is about to
come into being. And this is the setting in which we find Lizzie Borden on trial for a series of very brutal murders.
We have that context going on in the background. What's happening more specifically on the
ground in Massachusetts? This is where these murders unfold. For me, if I think about Massachusetts,
I think New England, I think at this point in time relatively well to do, quite industrial, and yet with this very
strong backbone of tradition and being very much part of the early colonies. Give us a little bit
more detail. Sure. We're in Fall River, Massachusetts, which is an East Coast city in Bristol County.
It's a really wealthy place. It's very prosperous, and there's a lot of opportunity here
for social mobility, which is going to be important to our story. I was just reading about
Fall River in the 19th century and something I came across. Now, I love a weird archaeological
discovery. It was famous in the time that Lizzie Borden was living there. This city was famous for a discovery
that had actually happened several decades earlier in the 1830s of a skeleton that was
found on the riverbank there dressed in armour. It's buried with metal objects, some tree
bark and some clothing that it's wearing and that's separate. Nobody could work out
if this was the burial of a Native American
or possibly an early colonist, it seemed to be already centuries old. It became the thing that
the town was known for, which is just a lovely little detail and maybe that's a whole episode
in and of itself. But certainly by the 1890s, it is also really a centre for industry. So we've
got print works, we've got, as we said, textile
factories, we've also got ironworks. The shipping, the river comes in, we've got shipping, transporting
coal, transporting cotton, and there's a railroad that's now connecting Fall River to other
towns and cities further inland. This is a really exciting place. It's something that's changing very rapidly and Lizzie's family
are part of this new emerging prosperous upper middle class. We're going to talk a little bit
about who her family are, but first of all I want you to describe the photograph that we have of
the family home. The thing that I want to say about this before you do that is that the house
itself was in a fairly affluent part of Fall River, but it wasn't in the most affluent place,
which was an area called The Hill, which was literally the houses on the hill that could look
down on everyone else. I want listeners to bear that in mind because that is going to become
an important aspect of this story later on. But for now, Anthony, tell us what we're looking at in this picture.
AC Right. So we're looking at, in many ways, a typical well-to-do New England house from
potentially the end of the 18th century, if not the beginning of the 19th. It is three stories
high, ground floor, first floor, and a top floor, which looks to be in
the eaves essentially.
There is a chimney jutting out of the top.
It is surrounded by picket fences, all very idyllic I suppose in one sense, although it
does very much look like it's in an urban or a suburban setting.
There are low gates windows down the side of the house as well it looks like very traditional almost 19th century church building if I didn't know any better but obviously this is domestic dwelling and yeah would frame and it's clad.
door over it, but looks very respectable. As you say, not a mansion, but certainly a respectable house. Nothing bizarrely unusual about it, I suppose, is worth saying. It seems like a very
run-of-the-mill domestic setting in many ways.
Yeah, it absolutely is. It's just that it's an affluent middle-class home in an affluent middle-class
city in a part of America that is changing shape in terms of the wealth, in terms of the industry,
but there's nothing out of the ordinary here. So let's go inside. If we were to walk into this
house, we would meet, first of all, Andrew Jackson Borden. This is the father of the household.
He is born in 1822. He's of English and Welsh descent. Interestingly, and this speaks very much to the times, he grew
up in poverty, but by the time we meet him as a grown man, as father to the notorious Lizzie
Borden, he is a property developer. He's also the director of several textile mills in the city,
and he is, importantly, president of the Union Savings Bank. His estimated worth
in 1892 is $300,000, which is about $10 million in 2024. So this is very much a self-made
man. This is the American dream in action here. Next we have Lizzie's stepmother. This is a woman called Abby Borden. She is born in 1828,
so she's just a little bit younger than Andrew. She has a polite, amicable relationship with
her stepdaughter Lizzie, but there's no warmth there. It's quite a distant relationship, and there
is a little bit of tension.
There's this idea that Lizzie and her sister that I'll talk about in a minute have that Abby has
married their father Andrew for his money. So money is an issue in this family. Andrew obviously
protects his wealth and covets more and more, possibly because of the background
that he's come from. And Abby is seen as someone who's maybe taken advantage of that.
Next we have Lizzie's sister called Emma Borden. She's born in 1851. She's the older sister
and she's incredibly religious. So she teaches at the local Sunday school. She's a treasurer for the
Christian Endeavour Society and a member of the Women's Christian Temperance Movement.
I'm not going to lie, she doesn't sound like wildly good fun. But her and Lizzie have a relatively
close relationship. And certainly in the context of Fall River in
the 1890s, they are respectable women, they are participating in their respectable Christian
community. Also living in the household, we have one servant, Bridget Sullivan, who is
an immigrant to the US from Ireland. And although she's called Bridget, the family call her Maggie. So we
will be calling her Maggie from now on. She's 25 years old. And as far as I could tell, trying to
read up on this case, she's been with the family for a relatively long time. So she's very familiar
with everyone who she's employed by and has an existing relationship with the two girls, Lizzie
and Emma.
What's interesting about discovering a little bit more now about the family is that it sounds to me like Andrew, the dad, is in a position to actually be living better than they are. Not that there's anything wrong with how they're living, but if he's worth $10 million in today's money and this house is nowhere near, he's not at the end of his means
by any stretch at all. So in a way, he outwardly at least appears to be living quite frugally.
Does that translate within the household structure itself? Or is he spending, often with these cases,
you see people are spending money frivolously and therefore that's putting tension in the house. But
from all I understand, that's not the case in this particular murder case. You're absolutely correct. It is the other way
around. He's strangely frugal. He doesn't like to spend money. And even though the area that they
live in has these quite well-to-do homes, and their home, at least on the outside, looks very
respectable, inside there is no indoor plumbing and there are no luxuries compared to the domestic setups of the
people around them. So he's someone who has built up this wealth but doesn't necessarily like to
spend it. One thing that he does do, which seems to create some tension amongst the family members,
is that he, as we said, he's a landlord in the city and he owns lots and lots of properties that he rents out mostly to people working in the factories. He actually gifts some of these properties
to members of Abby's family, the stepmother's family. There's some tension there maybe between
the daughters and their stepmother in that their inheritance seems to be being diluted and given
away to this new side of the
family that's married into the wealth. So there's already some problems and those are not the only
issues. We know, for example, that even though they all live under the same roof, Andrew eats
separately with his wife and his two daughters who, let's not forget our grown adults themselves,
don't eat at the table with them,
which is potentially a little bit odd. I can understand maybe children not eating with their
parents in this period and certainly that would be the case earlier on for wealthier families.
It feels a bit strange not to do that with adult daughters. The other thing to say is that he has
some quite strange behaviours. In the months before
these murders take place, and we're going to get into them in a little bit,
Andrew decides to go outside to the yard at the back of the house where Lizzie has built
a wooden roost for some pigeons that she is just keeping as pets. And he takes a hatchet to the roost,
he chops it up and he actually kills the pigeons that are in it. Unclear why, but of course
Lizzie is very, very, very upset by this. So there's a sort of strange violence in the
household actually. And I suppose from this distance and perspective
we could maybe speculate that Andrew is someone who likes to be in control of his money, of
his domestic setup, of the women who live in his household. So that's something to bear
in mind. This tension only increases in the early 1890s and Emma and Lizzie go away from the house on extended trips. They
travel quite far sometimes, but actually often they are staying in Fall River itself, in
other properties, in hotels, they're renting rooms out, they're trying to get out of the
domestic setup that they have with their father. This becomes a routine thing for them, which
again may be raising a bit of a red flag.
There are some other people to consider before we get on to the crimes that are about to be
committed in this house. A few days before the murders take place, Lizzie and Emma's
maternal uncle, so this is the brother of their mother who is dead and not in the picture anymore, their maternal uncle, a man called John
Vinneker Morse, visits Andrew, so his ex-brother-in-law, to discuss the sale of the house that his sister
used to live in, I think when she had the children. This is many years ago now. This seems to be the
source of an argument between the men because from what I can gather,
Morse wants that property back. His sister lived there, his nieces possibly grew up there,
and he feels that he and his family have a claim on it that Andrew does not. So there
is an argument and then Morse leaves. This is a few days before the murders.
Now around the same time as this, something else happens which is
highly suspect, and that is that every single member of the family living in that house
starts to become violently ill. They have stomach cramps, they're throwing up, they're very, very
unwell. And a family friend later speculates that it's because of some gone-off mutton that's been left
on the stove for too long and they've just given themselves food poisoning. But in the days leading
up to the murders, Abby, the stepmother, is overheard saying that she thinks she's been
poisoned. And the reason why she says this is because Andrew, the father, as we say, he's a landlord, he's involved in the bank,
he's involved in the factories, he's a deeply unpopular figure in a town where the wealth and
social divide is, I think it's fair to say, deepening in a lot of ways. And she is worried
that someone external to the household is actually trying to assassinate them. up with the world that we have. Well I'd like to tell you about my show, it's called Dan Snow's History Hit, and on that show you get a daily dose of history and the stories that really explain
just about everything that's ever happened. If you want to know the origin stories of the cities we
inhabit, what's in our kitchen cupboards, why we've always been drawn to dictators, the deep
history that explains what's going on, for example in the Middle East, well we've got you covered.
And if you'd rather be regaled with dramatic tales of powerful empires, we do that too. Get a little bit
smarter every day with Dan Snow's history hit wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, it's Fido. Start the semester with a new phone and a plan full of data without breaking
your budget. We have everything you need for an A-plus year. Come check out our special
back to school offers. They'll leave you with more cash in your pocket for the stuff you love.
Select plans even include data overage protection, so you can go all out without going over.
Don't wait. Our back-to-school offers are only available for a limited time.
Go to Fido.ca or a Fido store near you and save all semester long.
Fido. At Your Side.
Canada may be known for its landscapes and friendly people, but beneath the surface lies
a darker side of crime, history, and the paranormal.
Since 2017, the award-winning Dark Poutine podcast has explored the shadowy corners of
the Great White North and beyond, delivering chilling tales from a uniquely Canadian perspective.
Hosted by Mike Brown and Matthew Stockton with over 300 episodes and fresh releases So we're in this middle class, if not upper middle class neighborhood.
There is an air of respectability, but there are some tensions boiling beneath the surface,
tensions without the house of how popular Andrew Mayer may not be, and then tensions
within the house.
And it's around this point that I think those tensions start to boil over.
On the morning of Thursday, the 4th of August, 1892, everything seemed normal in the Borden
household. Lizzie and Emma's uncle Morse, who had slept there the night before, rose
from the guest bedroom and went downstairs
to breakfast with Andrew Borden and his wife Abby. Maggie, the maid, served the family as usual.
After they finished eating, Andrew and Morse continued to chat, while Abby, conscious of the used bedroom upstairs, went up to clean it.
At 8.48am, Morse left the house, heading out to visit Emma,
Lizzie's sister, in Fall River.
Fifteen minutes or so later, Andrew followed him out the door,
heading into the street for his morning walk.
When Andrew returned at around 10.30,
the door to his home was locked.
He tried the key, but it did not budge,
as though the whole thing had been jammed shut.
He called for assistance, and from within,
Maggie appeared to help him.
She would later describe hearing Lizzie laugh at the scene from the top of the stairs, something
Lizzie herself would deny.
Maggie helped her master to remove his boots and fetched his slippers, watching him retire
to the parlour.
He was tired.
They all were. The mysterious sickness that had struck them
down in the days before had taken their energy. Andrew fell asleep on the couch. Maggie, seizing
the opportunity, retired to her own room now, climbing the stairs to the attic and lying down on her bed there. Her eyes slowly closed. The peace would not last.
At 11.10, Maggie awoke to hear Lizzie shouting downstairs,
Come quick! Father's dead! Somebody's come in and killed him!
The next few moments were chaos. Across the street, the family's doctor, Dr. Seabury Bowen, heard the screaming and rushed
medical bag in hand to the scene.
What he saw next, he would later recount in court.
I saw the form of Mr. Borden lying on the lounge at the left of the sitting room door.
His face was very badly cut, apparently with a sharp instrument.
His face was covered with blood.
I felt his pulse and satisfied myself he was dead.
Glanced about the room and saw there was nothing disturbed,
neither the furniture nor anything at all.
Mr. Borden was lying with his face toward the south on his right side, and apparently
at ease, as if asleep.
His face was hardly to be recognized by one who knew him.
I made no other examination at the time except to feel his pulse.
Miss Lizzie had followed me part way through the dining room, and as I went back to the
kitchen, I asked her if she had seen anyone. She said, I have not.
Then I asked her, where have you been?
She replied, in the barn looking for some iron.
She said she was afraid her father had had trouble with the tenants,
and she had overheard loud conversations several times recently.
I asked for a sheet to cover up Mr. Borden.
Bridget brought me one.
Then Miss Lizzie asked me to telegraph to cover up Mr. Borden. Bridget brought me one.
Then Miss Lizzie asked me to telegraph to her sister Emma, and I went to the telegraph
office.
Nothing had been said about Mrs. Borden until now.
But before I went to send the telegram, the question was asked, where is Mrs. Borden?
And the answer, from Miss Lizzie, I think, but I am not certain, was that Mrs. Borden. And the answer, from Miss Lizzie, I think, but I am not certain, was that Mrs. Borden
had received a note that morning to visit a sick friend and had gone out.
On leaving the house, I met Officer Allen.
On my return from the telegraph office, I met Mrs. Churchill, who said,
They have found Mrs. Borden.
I asked where.
And she replied, Upstairs, in the front room.
I went up the front stairs and stopped a moment at the door of the guest room.
At that point, I looked over the bed and saw the prostrate form of Mrs. Borden.
I was standing directly in the door.
I went round to the front of the bed and placed my hand on her head.
I found there were wounds.
Then I felt her pulse.
She was dead.
Quite the scene. I love the detail that Lizzie stepped outside to get iron. Like, what? Just
Yeah, what the medical report that follows that Mrs.
Borden, Abby Borden, probably died first around 10.30 in the morning, and that Andrew, the
father, died at around 11, so he was killed afterwards. And we also know that each of them was bludgeoned and hacked with some kind of
axe or a hatchet. The other thing that's really important to say is that unlike Andrew, who was
possibly still asleep on the couch when he was killed when that first blow landed. Abby upstairs, Mrs. Borden, was thought to be facing her attacker,
indicating perhaps that she knew them, that she was speaking face to face with them when she was
first hit, and that she falls then face first on the floor where she is the victim of a more
sustained attack. So it's very, very brutal. It's very intimate in this family
space and we know from the testimonies of different people, including the people inside
the house who are not dead, Lizzie and Maggie the servant, that Maggie is upstairs on her
bed and Lizzie is supposedly in the yard. She, at some point according to Maggie, might be at the
top of the stairs. She is the one, however, it's important to remember that raises the
alarm. She's the one that calls Maggie from the bedroom and says, somebody's come in,
father's dead. And none of them seem to realise that Abby is dead upstairs.
Two, and the last detail that I think we need to take from this is that when the
doctor comes into the household and asks where Abby is, it's Lizzie who says,
she's not here, she's gone out.
For me, and there must be some other theories that we're about to meet with
here, but for me, it seems really plain where the suspicion would be directed.
It doesn't scream at all of innocence to me that Lizzie is the first person to discover,
let's say, her father.
You know, I can imagine the thinking being that, oh, well, if I discover him, you know,
I've raised the alarm.
But mind you, at the same time, there's no account here of Lizzie being covered in blood.
And surely she would have had to have been covered in blood if these attacks were as
brutal as they've been described.
Yes, that is a really crucial detail and we will get to that before we shine the light on Lizzie,
because I think I agree she is the obvious suspect. I think we need to run through some of the
theories that are put forward by the police at this early stage because let's remember Lizzie is the daughter of a now middle-class banker, landlord, factory owner, who's a
respectable woman, and she's never going to be their first port of call. They have
to exhaust all the other avenues first. The most obvious, I suppose, is that there might
be an intruder. Initially, and I think this is sadly predictable for this
period or indeed most of history, that the authorities begin to look beyond the household
itself at the poorest and the most marginalised in the community. So they round up people living on
the streets, they round up known criminals, and they even look at lots of Andrew's
tenants across the city. Remember, just a call back to Abby's fear that maybe someone
renting off them and disgruntled in some way had poisoned them. And Maggie absolutely repeats that
information to the police. So it seems like that might be, at least initially, a viable threat.
And there is this huge fear at the time of crossing the threshold of an outsider crossing
your domestic threshold.
The domestic threshold having become more precious than it ever was before, and this
intimate space being violated is seen as one of the most violent acts that can occur.
And it's always seen that people
from the lower classes can intrude into these more polite spaces. So that would be a very,
very tropey trope, if that makes sense. So yeah, I'm not surprised that that comes up as a
theory. It's an interesting one, but I don't see any proof of it anywhere. But yeah,
anyone else? Who else did they turn their attention towards?
So the attention then turns to the family if it wasn't someone from outside. And I
agree that that it's a sort of obvious fear in that time period, right, especially when,
I suppose when people are earning huge amounts of money or making huge wealth off industry,
and there's a sense of, you know, their property being the most valuable, and you don't want
anyone to try and come and take it or violate it being the most valuable and you don't want anyone
to try and come and take it or violate it in any way. So you can see why that's the initial claim,
but yes, there is attention turned to the family themselves, the more intimate acquaintances of
Andrew and Abby who are dead. One thing police do find in an initial search of the house is the hatchet.
It's in the basement.
Now this is probably the hatchet that was used by Andrew to break up the roost, the
coop for the pigeons in the yard.
We know it's in use in the household anyway.
It would have been used to chop firewood, possibly for protection, but it's more a household
tool than a weapon necessarily.
But it is found in the basement and the wooden handle has been broken clean off as though
the person using it last wielded it with enormous force, which is pretty chilling.
Well, we know that Andrew did, do we? Is the hatchet covered in blood? Is that how we
know? Or is it just assumed that this is the hatchet? Because Andrew had used that with
force against the chicken coop. That sounds like it was a pretty maniacal action on his
behalf.
Yeah, and he kills the pigeons. So even if there was blood on there, that could be the
blood of an animal very, very easily. The other suspect that comes up is the uncle,
Uncle Morse, who had
been obviously staying the night before in the house, but had been witnessed leaving
that morning and had been going off to meet the sister Emma who was staying elsewhere.
We don't know if she's staying away because of a recent argument with the family. Maybe
it's because everyone else in the household got ill and she didn't and she wanted to remove
herself. Maybe she's visiting friends, it's quite unclear. But she's also held up briefly
as a suspect, although she seems to have alibi. There's one other person that I want to mention
really briefly here, and this isn't a theory that I spent particularly long looking into,
but it's worth mentioning that there is a possibility that Andrew had an illegitimate son from a different, a completely separate relationship.
And there is some speculation that this illegitimate son wanted financial recognition from his father,
and that that was a source of argument.
It's too neat, isn't it? It's too neat a theory. It feels more fiction than it does reality.
LW I was just gonna say that, yeah, it feels like
it would be on the stage in the 19th century. That's like a theatrical plot. But pretty
soon the authorities have no choice but to turn to Lizzie as the suspect. And interestingly,
they don't necessarily turn to Maggie in the same way, which I find very interesting and
not necessarily how you
would expect it to play out. Though Lizzie claims to have been in the yard outside the
house the whole time. But what strikes Maggie about that initial moment when Lizzie raises
the alarm and shouts for her to come is that actually when she stood over the body of her
father and later when they discover Abby dead upstairs. Lizzie's quite cold and
actually almost a little bit curious about the injuries and she doesn't seem particularly
hysterical or disturbed by what they're looking at. Of course, we might today contribute that to
being that she's in shock. If anyone's ever been in shock, they'll know that your body shuts down
to a certain extent and you don't necessarily behave in a way that you would be able to predict.
Crucially though, because of her social standing and because it's her father who is dead,
the police don't really search her and they also don't search her bedroom.
She says when the police arrive that she's feeling unwell, that she's so shocked by everything
that she needs to lie down. The policemen in the house do a very cursory head around the door,
just checking that there aren't blood splatters up the wall, and they don't look at anything
beyond that, which of course we would consider now to be hugely remiss. But they think that she is a
vulnerable young woman, she's had a great loss, she needs
to rest and recuperate. That is then coupled with the fact that when she's questioned by the police,
she acts in a way that's actually quite snobbish, and she really draws on those social distinctions.
Who is this? Lizzie now is snobbish.
This is Lizzie, yeah. And something to remember about the police force in America generally
in this period, but specifically in Fall River, is that they're made up almost primarily of
immigrants, specifically Irish immigrants, which I suppose you could say potentially that's why
they don't necessarily leap to the idea that Maggie might
have done it. Maybe there's some solidarity there or maybe there's simply not the prejudice
that police who didn't have that background wouldn't have brought to it. But when they
interview Lizzie, she absolutely leans in to her social superiority. She acts in a way
that's very stoical, very cold, very calm. She's very clear and precise
in the information she gives them, but it does not take long for that to start breaking down and
little mistakes in her testimony start to creep in. So she claims, for example, that Maggie
was the one who handed her a note from Abby, her stepmother, saying Abby was going
out to visit a sick friend.
But when Maggie's asked by the police about this, she says that there never was a note
like that.
So it's not looking great for Lizzie already.
And that's where this testimony comes from the doctor where he said Lizzie had said that
Abby was gone out.
So this is potentially...
Now look, let's give her the benefit
of the doubt. You know, we said Maggie was escaping a lot of attention here. Maybe Maggie had
got the note and is now denying it. But there is another crucial piece of evidence that comes next
that is quite damning for Lizzie, right? Two pieces of really crucial evidence.
The first of these is that, and this seems totally wild to
me, Lizzie has tried to buy poison the day before from the local druggist. When the police find this
out, of course, they ask her about it. She claims that she wanted to use the poison to clean a fur
coat. But even by 19th century standards, this wasn't really a method that anyone used.
Maggie certainly has never heard of this. Also, it would most likely have been Maggie's job
to clean the clothes, not Lizzie herself. So it's very, very odd behavior if this is true.
ALICE And so she's tried to buy this poison the day before, but wasn't it the day before that the
family were,
according to Abby, that she felt the family had all been potentially poisoned as well?
ALICE It's in the days, multiple days leading up to the deaths that they're unwell. But I suppose
there's a moment of doubt that's introduced there into the minds of the police investigating this,
that if Lizzie was trying to buy poison the day before,
had she succeeded on other days? Had she already dosed those people? Was she giving them something
that was already available in the household? I'm thinking something like rat poison, that kind of
thing. It's definitely where my mind is going with this. Yeah.
Uh huh. Yeah. So is it actually that Lizzie has already tried to kill her family in the
days leading to these more brutal physical murders? The next completely damning thing
that happens is that two days after the killings, the police, of course, have taken the bodies
away from the house now, but Lizzie's still here in the house with Maggie. She has nowhere
else to go, really, this is her home.
And neighbours that are well-meaning keep popping in to check how she's doing, and
I suppose they're curious as well, they want to see the crime scene. News of this
has already spread all over Fall River, and very soon it's going to become an incredibly
famous case across America. One of these neighbours comes into the house and she finds Lizzie in the kitchen,
tearing up a dress and putting the ripped parts of it into the fire in the stove. And of course,
the neighbour says to Lizzie, what's that? What are you doing? And what's all that red stuff on
the dress? And Lizzie says, oh no, no, no, don't mind this. I was wearing this dress and I
brushed against some wet paint and it's not washing out. So I'm just getting rid of it.
I'm going to burn it.
So for this to add up then, if this is a clue, and it appears to be, what would have had
to happen is that Lizzie is wearing these clothes that she's now trying to rip up when she
kills Abby and then her father because Maggie's asleep. She then takes time to go and change into
another outfit, so therefore she's not covered in blood. And then she raises the alarm and she's
hidden these clothes somewhere in the meantime, the ones she was wearing when she committed the
murder. This would be the theory. And now she's going back to try and destroy that evidence. And as you say, they haven't checked
her room, they haven't searched her room at this point. So I guess this certainly could
add up, right?
The only thing that I find strange about it is that so we have the dress that is covered,
Lizzie says if we take her at face value in red paint, that she's brushed up against
something, which is of course, suspected it's blood, but we don't know that. But she's destroying the evidence.
Now another thing that the police find in the days afterwards when they come back to
the house and comb through it again is a bucket of rags that's been left in the cellar. These
are torn pieces of material and they are covered in blood. Now when they find these, of course they think
these are the rags that have helped clean up the crime scene, clean up the murderer,
and so they assume that they're Lizzie's. She says, no no no, these are the rags that I use when I'm
on my period, you know they're covered in menstrual blood, and the family doctor confirms that she is
on her period. On the surface we've got the dress covered
in blood and some rags covered in blood hidden in the same place, don't forget, in the basement where
the broken hatchet is. But to me those are the actions of two very different people.
If Lizzie is destroying evidence on her dress, why would she leave a bucket of bloody rags in the
basement? And why would she have used multiple sheets of fabric to clean herself,
to clean the crime scene? We know that obviously in the 19th century there weren't the same sanitary
products available that there are today and women did use rags in their undergarments as a way to
clean themselves, to put inside their underwear. Is that really what this bucket of rags is? And of course, because
we've seen this in multiple cases, actually. I'm thinking back to the Sarah Malcolm case
in the early 18th century that we saw that was exactly the same defense. When people found rags
covered in blood, Sarah Malcolm in that instance says, oh, no, no, no, that's just my period,
it's menstrual blood. And we see it again and again, and the effect on the men, it's always men who are doing the prosecution,
is often to take a step back and say, oh, okay, don't want to know anything about that, thanks,
but we won't take that any further. That's your private business. That's ladies' business,
nothing to do with us. And women in the cases that we've looked at so far have sometimes used that. I mean,
it's ambiguous, but I think they have used it almost as a way to evade
punishment, to escape being prosecuted. But in the case of Lizzie, I don't know. She could
still be cleaning the blood of her father off her dress, but those rags could be her period blood.
That's my instinct. I think the dress is something. I think the rags are nothing got to do with this case, because as you say, why would she leave them there?
It doesn't really add up.
And then for the doctor to confirm that she is having her period, then that to me seems like it's not really worth following up,
because they're not going to be able to prove anything about that blood, regardless of whose it is, given the context of the time that this is happening in.
And the fact that, as you say, they're rags rather than, you know, a swathe of material that was used to clean up.
But also, I mean, how bloody were the crime scenes?
Was there a clean up job done?
Like, that would have been relatively obvious, I would have thought.
So it appears to me that these will have been what she says they are.
And that's possibly why the police don't pursue it any further.
Well, they are about to pursue it further.
She is going to be arrested.
So on August 11th, several days after the murders, she, Lizzie is arrested for murder.
Although it will take, I think, a year, almost a year for the trial to come to fruition.
What's so interesting in this initial moment of the arrest is that opinion about whether or not
Lizzie did it is absolutely split. It splits the city into two camps. On the one hand,
we've got people who think she did it and interestingly, most of the people who fall
into that camp are factory workers, are people in the lower and working classes who see her and her father and
everything that she stands for as their natural enemy. On the other hand, we've got the people who
believe that she's innocent and among those are the church groups that her and her sister were part of, and interestingly, suffragists
societies, societies for the advancement and equality of women, rally to support her. And
so by the time it gets to trial, the case is already this notorious thing, but we're
really no closer to knowing whether or not she did it, and it's that ambiguity that
people cannot get enough of.
By the first day of Lizzie Borden's trial for murder, interest in the case was booming.
Newspaper presses ran hot with copy reporting on events and speculating not only on motive
but on the outcome of the courtroom.
And crowds, notable for the high numbers of women among them,
blocked to see the drama unfold.
The Daily Herald, June 9th, 1893.
It was just eleven o'clock when a closed carriage drew up to the rear of the courthouse.
A deputy sheriff stepped out of it and handed out his hand to assist Lizzie Borden.
The crowd pressed forward in a sort of frenzy to catch a glimpse of the woman,
but she slipped quietly into the building before they were able to do so
and walked quietly to her place in the prisoner's dock.
The theory of the prosecution is that Lizzie Borden was on bad terms with her mother-in-law
and that this enmity with her knowledge that her father intended to change his will to
favour Mrs. Borden incited her to the double murder.
The case against Lizzie was compelling, especially when a neighbour, the same that had
caught her ripping and burning her dress, swore before the jury that Lizzie had said to her the day before the murders
that she would soon be going on vacation, and felt that something is hanging over me,
I cannot tell what it is.
And yet, opinion over Lizzie's guilt was divided. In one remarkable and callous
moment of the trial, the skulls of Andrew and Abby Borden, now stripped of their flesh
and used as evidence, were brought into the courtroom. A ripple of shock and sympathy
ran through the crowd when, confronted with the bones,
Lizzie fainted.
On June 20th, the all-male jury stepped out to deliberate.
They took just an hour and a half to reach their conclusion.
Lizzie Borden was not guilty.
Do you know what? I did not know the outcome of this case. was not guilty.
Do you know what? I did not know the outcome of this case. That's the first time that I'm...
I know it exists in folklore and there's been movies
and there's been all kinds of comics and stuff,
but that is not... I didn't know what the verdict was.
And I am surprised, it has to be said.
But we'll come to that in a second.
That image of the heads
being brought out into the courtroom,
that's pretty incredible. If I were being skeptical, and I always am, it's very easy to
feign fainting. Yeah, exactly. Now there's ambiguity around this moment. There are some
reports that say that these were models of the skulls of the victims. Other people in other places have claimed
these were the skulls. But either way, these are the skulls of people who've been, let's
not forget, without putting too fine a point on it, hacked to death with a hatchet. Lizzie's
fainting, is that the reaction of an innocent daughter slash stepdaughter seeing the reality of what had been done to her loved ones?
Is it the reaction of someone who committed those murders and is now having to relive that,
or are those the actions of someone who did do the killings and is trying to act as she believes an
innocent person would do? The other thing to say, I think, about the court case
and why she gets off is because of the all-male jury. And she absolutely, whether she's guilty
or innocent, she plays them. She turns up every day for court with a fresh bouquet of flowers.
We famously know that flowers in the 19th century have their own language. You can make bouquets
and gift them. It's part of a courtship
ritual that people do, and these different flowers have different meanings, different ideas that they
symbolise. And the newspapers every single day clamour to see what flowers she's brought in and
try and decode them. It's sort of quite Taylor Swift-esque, minus the murder, of course, but
that thing of hiding messages
and giving something to your public to decode and that they'll become obsessed with. Interestingly,
the newspapers every day report completely different flowers, so obviously a lot of these
newspaper men have no idea what they're looking at and are just making it up. One man's white rose
will be another man's peony, they don't have a clue. But she does that, and she also wears these really ornate brooches at her throat to draw attention up to her face,
whilst wearing entirely black morning clothes. And this is a year on from the deaths of her family.
This is someone who either has an unbelievable instinct for PR and how to play it, or she is being coached really well by the team around her defense.
I suppose regardless of whatever tactics she's using, they work, right? Because she's found innocent and shocked and all as I might be by that,
even at the insinuation that she was manipulating the jury potentially, she now has to go on and live her life and she has to live out the rest of her life.
And look, it's the late 19th century.
If we know anything about the late 19th century, it's that reputation is everything.
But then we did have the suffragists coming out in support of her during the trial.
So is she now heralded as this hero or is her reputation destroyed?
Her reputation is largely destroyed because of the way that she gives evidence in court,
because of the way that her private life is laid bare. She's seen as a bit of a pariah
really, and interestingly she doesn't leave the city, she doesn't leave Fall River. Her
and her sister actually sell up the house where the murders happened, which you can understand. They buy with all the money they've
inherited from their father a big house on the hill, the hill being the most desirable part of
the city where the wealthiest live. It's such a fascinating thing that she ends up quite literally on top of this city, living with its wealthiest,
looking down on everyone else, using the money that her dead father has left her that's come
to her through his death, when potentially she took his life.
Yeah, it's suspicious as well, right? Because what it highlights is the fact that Abby had
to be killed in this scenario in order for the sisters to get the money.
Yes.
Just the father dying is totally pointless because then the money is going to Abby.
So and the fact that Abby is killed first, according to the forensics at the time, doesn't look great.
Yeah. There's an interesting question, I suppose, about Lizzie's sister Emma as well, who we know she's not in the house at the time of the murders.
She's been staying elsewhere and their uncle, Uncle Morse, does go to find her later on in the day. But they do live together
afterwards. And I suppose there's maybe a case to be made that they did the murders together
in some way. But interestingly, after the trials died down and Lizzie's got her newfound freedom
and they've bought the house on the hill. Lizzie takes up what historians have
called a very close friendship with an actress, question mark over the nature of that relationship,
certainly. This actress moves into the house and it actually leads to a breakdown in the
relationship between Lizzie and her sister Emma. There's some fascinating dynamics going
on there, there's some possible queerness. There's
this family intimacy that's interrupted by another person. And I'm so fascinated by the
fact that Lizzie is drawn to an actress, no matter the relationship status, that for someone who's
put on quite the performance herself, that is so tantalizing. But of course she lives on for a very
long time in pop culture. she's, you know,
she's everywhere. As you mentioned, Anthony, she's in comics, she's in film, she's in TV.
Interestingly, she's written sometimes as a sort of murdering psychopath, but she's often a kind of
feminist hero as well. Which I find interesting. And I love that on TV she's played in one particular
production by Christina Ricci, the absolute
queen of 90s gothic.
Yeah, so we love Christina.
Which I just love. And I'm going to leave you with two thoughts on this ambiguous case.
The first is a nursery rhyme that has come down to us. And I think it probably does date
from the 19th century in the moment
of the trial. And it is this. Lizzie Borden took an axe and gave her mother 40 whacks
and when she saw what she had done, she gave her father 41. I love it. Catchy.
I do like it actually. I think I've heard that on like some TV thing or something before.
But yeah, you will have done you will have done. Now, the other thing that I want to say to you,
and I want your opinion on this. So the Borden house where the murders take place, it still exists.
And it is now a BnB. Oh, my God, please, can we go? You can stay there. The rooms are named after all the members of the family and some of the
police who investigated it.
Oh, I don't necessarily love that now.
I don't necessarily love that.
Okay.
Let the record show that that's a bit weird.
It does feel kind of voyeuristic, doesn't it?
And it's a sort of house museum slash B and B.
Would you stay there?
I-
Yeah.
Really? Oh God, yeah. In a heartbeat. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I wouldn't need, I wouldn't need to question it. Yeah really Oh, God, yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I wouldn't need I wouldn't need to question it.
Yeah, no, I absolutely would.
I'd stay there right now.
Somebody came and took me the naming of the rooms after the people little bit close to
the bone and because you can even stay in Abby's room where she was hacked death on
the floor.
I mean, it's not the most tasteful.
No, it's not the most tasteful.
But I suppose there are some people that would argue that this episode of this podcast is not the most tasteful. No, it's not the most tasteful. But I suppose there are some people that would argue that this episode of this
podcast is not the most tasteful.
Like, why are we still going on about this?
What does it serve?
That it's just the glorification of a woman being murdered, that it's the
women's reproductive cycles are coming into the frame in criminal trials.
You're linking femininity with criminality.
True crime is
gory, why do we come to these things with such interest?
I just think it's a continuation of that.
Where do we draw that line?
For me, one of the most tantalizing things about any historical experience is the space
in which things, big things, life-changing things, life-ending things happen.
And there's something otherworldly that happens in those spaces even today.
So for me, the chance to experience what that space still feels like and the communication
within those spaces would be utterly fascinating. I think it brings you a little bit closer to that
history. Why do we want to go closer to that history? Well, I think anybody listening to this
or anybody who's watched the Lizzie Borden TV drama or anybody who's read a true crime book ever in their lives can't kind of ask that question because you're all doing it to we're all doing it too.
So i think sometimes we get a little bit squeamish about this true crime but it's what ultimately boils down to is that human beings are inquisitive about going to the edges of what's acceptable
and to get as close to those edges without it ever affecting them as you possibly can.
And to be in that space would be truly, truly remarkable. Grim, yes.
Haunting, yes.
Sad, I'm sure.
But all of that history, all of those lives, all of those stories containing this one
particular space, I'd have to go.
Do you think Lizzie did it?
Um, it's tricky because I came into this thinking she'd been found guilty potentially.
That's how I knew.
Because she's so famous, or infamous, I was like, well, she obviously was found guilty,
but of course she becomes more infamous because she's not.
Do I think she did it?
Yes.
Now, does her sister and uncle know a little bit more than potentially we think? Possibly, I think.
I wouldn't rule that out, particularly because that's who seems to coalesce around her in the immediacy of the discovery of the bodies.
And that's interesting in itself.
The fact that the uncle is in the house within 24 hours, within within two hours of this happening is interesting.
The fact that the sister is entirely away is also interesting. But yeah,
I think she definitely played a part, if not totally on her own. What do you think?
I think she probably did. But I think for me what this case gives us, and I suppose it links to
what you're saying about being in that space today, if you were to go as a visitor to the B&B,
saying about being in that space today, if you were to go as a visitor to the B&B, it takes you inside a late 19th century middle class home in a way that this is not a home
that was unusual across America in this period or indeed across Britain, but it takes you
inside that home and plonks you right down in amongst these complicated, inter-human
relationships. This is, again, not an extraordinary family,
but one filled with real people, with real fears and aspirations and resentments.
It allows us into the broader context in which they live, but also into their minds, into their
inner workings, and into the acts that they do and do not commit within that space.
I think that's fascinating. I think that's what After Dark does for us so much is that we get to
go into these spaces throughout history and to think about the way that they're set up,
the hierarchies, the power balances that exist within them, and then what happens when
that's all turned on its head or disrupted in some way and chaos ensues.
And it can tell us so much about the moments of history that that's taking place in.
And I suppose something wider about how human beings react in these scenarios.
Well, so many of you have requested this episode, and I can see why, because there is so much to think with here.
And I can see why, because there is so much to think with here.
But as a result, I now want to know what you think about this. Let us know on our socials or write into us at afterdarkathistoryhit.com.
Did Lizzie Borden commit these murders?
And we do love hearing from you.
So if you have any suggestions for episodes, let us know there too.
That's the best place to contact us for any episode suggestions.
Follow us, obviously, wherever you get your podcasts.
Tell your friends about us and how great we are.
And please leave us a five star review because it helps other people
discover the podcast as well.
And if you've enjoyed our exploration of American history in this episode,
then don't forget that History Hit has an entire podcast
dedicated to American history.
It's called American History Hit and it's hosted by Don Wildman.
So go and check that out now,
and we'll see you next time.
Back on After Dark. and most reliable internet. Perfect for streaming lectures all day or binging TV shows all night.
Save up to $20 per month on Rogers Internet.
Visit Rogers.com for details.
We got you, Rogers.
Canada may be known for its landscapes and friendly people,
but beneath the surface lies a darker side of crime,
history, and the paranormal.
Since 2017, the award-winning Dark Poutine podcast
has explored the shadowy corners of the great white north and beyond, normal.