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Video: Lizzie Borden: Did she or didn't she?

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    >>> this morning, our series on "unexplained mysteries" continues with the infamous story of lizzie borden , a murder case that made headlines more than a century ago, the borden intrigue endures to this day. the scene of the crime remains virtually the same.

    >>> sit a true crime nursery rhyme --

    >> lizzie borden took an ax. gave her mother 40 whacks when she saw what she had done gave her father 41.

    >> the story of lizzie borden , a stoic new england spinster accused of one of the most shocking double murders in american history . elizabeth montgomery famously played her in a haunting tv movie . while lizzie was tried for killing her wealthy father and step mother , a jury found her not guilty. so what really happened on that summer day in 1892 ? for answers, we travel to fall rivers, massachusetts where the borden house appears the same way it did more than a century ago. if you think time stands still on the outside, wait until you see who's at the door.

    >> hello, there. i'm leanne wilbur and i'm one of the owners of the lizzie borden bed and breakfast museum. welcome to my house. please come in.

    >> that's right. an infamous crime scene is now a b&b. for a price, you can spend the night in the rooms where andrew and abbey borden lived and died.

    >> this is the room where mr. borden was found here on the sofa.

    >> that's what makes it so chilling is that you really feel like that body could be right there. it's the same room that it feels in.

    >> dressed in period costumes for tours, wilbur bought the house a few years back and says people come to visit and like herself speculate.

    >> do you think she's guilty?

    >> let's just say i don't think she's completely innocent.

    >> reporter: what we know for sure is that on august 4 , 1892 , lizzie told a neighbor that her father, a frugal banker had been killed, hacked to death in the sitting room . shortly later, lizzie 's step mother is found murdered upstairs.

    >> this is where her body is, yes?

    >> yes. right on the floor. between the bed and the dresser.

    >> you had people put their -- want to put a cot right there where the body was? to fully experience this oroom.

    >> the cot does fit right there. a lot of people prefer to sleep on the floor.

    >> that's creepier.

    >> no one but lizzie was at home at the time of the killings and no one was arrested. the case was circumstantial evidence . and much of the evidence is preserved today at the fall river historical society , including the blood-stained bedspread, hair samples, and this --

    >> this is the hatchet that was introduced as evidence?

    >> yes.

    >> michael martins, co-curator of the historical society let me hold the alleged murder weapon. it's still sharp it's creepy what could be the murder weapon, what was presented as the murder weapon. i kind of want to put it down. martins, who along with co-curator has written a new book on the case. says the real lizzie was far different from the myth created over time .

    >> she was a giving person, a very caring person. she loved children. she was a religious person, a pious one.

    >> what ever became of lizzie after the verdict? she inherited her father's fortune and moved to a mansion in fall river which she called maplecroft where crowds would gather to catch a glimpse of her. while she never married, she has relatives who live to this day.

    >> i've been proud of my borden heritage. it has nothing to do with lizzie .

    >> she wears period costumes to re-enact the case with others is certain of one thing.

    >> i do believe lizzie did it.

    >> did she or didn't she? the mystery may never be solved. but if you find yourself in fall river , drop by the borden house, just be ready should something go bump in the night .

    >>> and the b&b owner leanne wilbur , she doesn't like to call the house haunted but she prefers to say it's active. she's felt things, seen things. i've got stung by a yellow jacket when i was there.

    >> really.

    >> that's kind of scary.

    >> i'm wrapping my arms of people wanting to sleep on the floor where the body was found.

    >> i'm not one of those people, you're not one of those people. there are people out there and good luck

By
TODAY staff
updated 4/15/2011 4:36:31 PM ET 2011-04-15T20:36:31

"Lizzie Borden took an ax and gave her mother forty whacks, and when she saw what she had done, she gave her father forty-one."

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Or did she? Nearly 120 years after the gruesome double murder made headlines around the country – and spawned a true-crime nursery rhyme – a new book to be published in June may shatter the myth about the Massachusetts spinster.

"Lizzie comes across as this cold sort of stoic individual who was very capable of murdering the Bordens," said Michael Martins, co-curator of the Fall River Historical Society. "But when you look at her life, her life was no different than that of many of her contemporaries. She was a very giving person, a very caring person."

Martins and co-curator Dennis Binette have authored "Parallel Lives: A Social History of Lizzie A. Borden and her Fall River," which, through private letters and correspondence, attempts to cast the city's most vilified citizen in a new light.

TODAY
Lizzie Borden

"Certainly in the process of our research, the Lizzie Borden that emerges is a completely different character than the character that descended through history," Martins told TODAY. "People will walk away with a different idea of who this person was and her family and background."

Banker and wife butchered
The Borden tale, which has been passed down by generations, is macabre and remains a mystery. What is known is that on August 4, 1892, Andrew Borden, an affluent banker, and his second wife, Abby Borden, were murdered in the house the couple shared with Mr. Borden’s two unmarried daughters, Lizzie, 32, and Emma, 41.

Mr. Borden was found hacked to death in a first floor sitting room. The body of Mrs. Borden was discovered in a second-floor room. Lizzie Borden was arrested for the killings. The prosecution tried to show that she committed the crime because she feared her stepmother would inherit most of her father’s land and money.

The trial became a feeding frenzy for the press and a public hungry to know more about the accused, even if the information often was inaccurate.

"The reporters who wrote these articles, of course, never knew her," Martins said. "They did not interview her. They were on the other side of the bar in the courtroom, basically looking at her.”

“Lizzie was a Yankee girl, born and bred,” he said of the apparent lack of feeling she exhibited. “Emotion was not something that was displayed publicly.”

Found not guilty
The case came to a dramatic ending when a jury of 12 men returned a not-guilty verdict, an outcome that Martins believed was probably justified. "She was acquitted because there was no evidence against her," Martins said. "Any evidence they had was circumstantial."

The lone smoking gun the state attempted to link to Borden was a hatchet retrieved from the house. But that hatchet, which is now part of the Fall River Historical Society collection, may have actually helped Borden’s defense. "They found no blood on the hatchet," Martins said. "They did find one stand of hair, but it did not match the hair taken from the head of the victims."

After the murders, Borden moved out of the house and lived out her remaining years in another Fall River mansion where people would walk by to catch a glimpse of her in the window.

Borden, who was 67 when she died in 1927, never married. But she has distant relatives still living in Fall River, including a cousin, Barbara Morrissey, who has no doubt as to whether Borden was innocent or guilty.

"I do believe that Lizzie did it," Morrissey told TODAY. "I think if you look at motive and opportunity, it all points to Lizzie. And it’s not to say she was a vicious, cruel person in other manifestations of her life. I think she was afraid that her father would pass first. And if that happened, and the money went to her stepmother, she and her sister would be beholden to the stepmother."

‘Very kind woman’
Morrissey, who said her family rarely talked about the case when she was growing up, called Borden a "very kind woman" who may not have fully intended on killing her father, though she probably had considerable anger toward her stepmother.

She is part of a group called the "Second Street Irregulars" who meet to discuss aspects of the murders and Borden’s life. Sometimes they convene at the actual scene of the crime: 92 Second Street, the original Borden home that is now open for business as The Lizzie Borden Bed & Breakfast Museum.

TODAY
The Lizzie Borden Bed & Breakfast Museum

Lee-Ann Wilbur, the proprietor, said guests come to spend a night in the rooms where Mr. and Mrs. Borden met their grisly fate. And for $1,500 a night, the entire house can be rented. Although the furnishings are Victorian, the home has modern touches, including Wi-Fi and free internet access.

"We get people from all over the world and all walks of life," Wilbur said. "We have people interested in history, interested in true crime, a lot of people interested in the paranormal."

‘Active house’
Does she believe the house is haunted? "I don’t like to use the word ‘haunted,’" she said, "I like to call it ‘active’"

As for Martins, while he hopes his book humanizes Borden, he understands why the fascination for such a violent act endures to this day.

"I think the fact that it was a woman who was involved," he said, "a woman who was from a good family at a time when it was commonly believed a woman could not commit such a heinous crime, and the fact it was a family of some wealth."

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