• Lizzie Borden Comes to Monsterquest

    The word this week is that the Lizzie Borden episode, shot at the house on Second St. last winter, should air June 11th at 9 p.m.  The program usually showcases things like Big Foot, Champ, the Loch Ness creature, and other cryptozoology beasties. I wonder what this says about Lizzie? 

  • Good news for Green St.

    A recent visit to the Brownell house on Green Street, the address of Emma Borden’s alibi on the day of the murders, revealed good things happening for the old place. 

    The sagging front steps have been removed, the jungle growth of trumpet vine has been cut back, and a large dumpster in the side yard is filled with debris. Structurally, the house has been pronounced in good shape, with some minor roof leaks and a side porch which needs shoring up.  Here’s hoping for brighter days ahead soon for the historic property!

     

  • Court House taking shape

    Just across from the Borden driveway, the towering girders of the new court house throw a dark shadow across #92.  The structure is finally moving along in construction at a fast pace.

  • Good-bye to Lizzie’s Schoolhouse

     

      The Nathaniel Borden School , formerly the Morgan Street School, closed its doors forever in June of 2007.  Lizzie Borden was a student here until her 14th birthday.  There are no plans to demolish the historic 1868 building, but its ultimate use to the city is still undecided. 

    The Nathaniel Borden Morgan Street School before closure

  • Dr. Michael Kelly

    The Borden house was surrounded by doctors on the average day.  Dr. Chagnon lived behind #92, back on Third Street but was not home at the time of the murders.  He had been called away and Lucy Collette sent to his offices to tell patients he could not attend them on the morning of August 4th.  Dr. Bowen who lived across the street from the Bordens was making his rounds when Bridget Sullivan, the Borden’s maid knocked frantically on the door.  Just next door-one house south on Second Street was Dr. Michael Kelly, a specialist in pediatric medicine, who was also not home that morning.  Andrew Borden was, in any event, well beyond the ministrations of any doctor by the time his body was discovered.

    The Kelly house still exists, and is currently for sale.  Dr. Kelly and his young wife Caroline, who was expecting a baby at the time of the murders, became much-beloved figures in the city’s social circles. By 1906 they were living on Third Street.  The Kellys are buried in Saint Patrick’s Cemetery.

  • Lizzie Live this Sunday

    Sunday, April 20th @ 3:00 p.m



    LIZZIE BORDEN LIVE
    . . . THINK YOU KNOW HER . . .THINK AGAIN
    THE LEGEND COMES TO LIFE
    Winner 2007 JACOBY AWARD:
    Most Outstanding Performance by an Actress for Lizzie Borden Live

    “Dalton is nothing less than superb in her depiction of the character,as her Lizzie is alternating sweet, innocent, witty and savagely murderous.  The audience is left to decide which Lizzie is the real one.” 

    Ed Wismer, Cape May Star and Wave

    Written & performed by:  Jill Dalton
    Directed by:  Jack McCullough
    Original Music by:  Larry Hochman

    78th Street Theatre Lab
    236 West 78th Street
    2nd floor
    (Sorry, no latecomers admitted.)

    (Between B’way & Amsterdam/next door to Stand-up New York)
    #1 train to 79th Street

    Tickets  $20.00  (mention ‘pears’ receive $5 off)

    Reservations : LIZZIEBORDENLIVE@GMAIL.com

    Tell your friends!!!

    Check out Lizzie’s Web Site:  WWW.LIZZIEBORDENLIVE.COM

    Lizzie Borden Live was commissioned by The East Lynne Theater Company where it premiered in Cape May, NJ in 2007.

  • Salem Witch?

     +=  ?????????

    Salem is rumored to be the new hot spot for weekending for the Boston crowd but who would have thought it might become a venue for Lizzie Borden during the annual Salem Haunted Happening Madness in October.  Word has it that the Essex Street  Newmarket Gallery will be the hot spot for Lizzie to be hanging out come October 2008.  What would a Fall River girl have to say to all of this? 

    http://www.thesaleminsider.com/2008/04/07/nightlife-in-salem/

  • Lizzie Borden Live-Back by Popular Demand!

    Next 4 performances: 

    LIZZIE BORDEN LIVE
    . . . THINK YOU KNOW HER . . .THINK AGAIN
    THE LEGEND COMES TO LIFE

     

    Winner 2007 JACOBY AWARD:
    Most Outstanding Performance by an Actress for Lizzie Borden Live

    “Dalton is nothing less than superb in her depiction of the character,
    as her Lizzie is alternating sweet, innocent, witty and savagely
    murderous.  The audience is left to decide which Lizzie is the real
    one.”  Ed Wismer, Cape May Star and Wave

    Written & performed by:  Jill Dalton
    Directed by:  Jack McCullough
    Original Music by:  Larry Hochman

    Sunday, April 20th @ 3:00 p.m.
    Sunday, June 8th @ 3:00 p.m.
    (Sorry, no latecomers admitted.)
    78th Street Theatre Lab
    236 West 78th Street
    (Between B’way & Amsterdam/next door to Stand-up New York)
    #1 train to 79th Street
    Tickets  $20.00  (mention ‘pears’ receive $5 off)

    Reservations : LIZZIEBORDENLIVE@GMAIL.com

    Also selected as part of the Six Figures Theatre Company’s 6th Annual
    Artists of Tomorrow Festival with two performances.

    Friday, May 2nd @ 9 pm
    Sunday, May 4th @ 3 pm

    The West End Theatre
    (Church of St. Paul & St. Andrew)
      263 West 86th Street
    (bet. B’wy & West End Ave.)

    For tickets call 212-868-4444 or visit http://www.smarttix.com

    Tell your friends!!!
    Check out Lizzie’s Web Site:  WWW.LIZZIEBORDENLIVE.COM
    Lizzie Borden Live was commissioned by The East Lynne Theater Company
    where it premiered in Cape May, NJ in 2007.

  • The Psychic Solution?

    Selling like hotcakes off the shelves of Phantom Book Shop in Ventura is Richard and Deb Senate’s latest excusion into the psychic world – a solution to the Borden case. Deb has the gift of picking up impressions from holding objects from a crime scene.  The couple is now tackling England’s own Lizzie Borden- Jack the Ripper.  For ordering information and more on this title, visit their website at

    http://ghost-pod.com/2008/04/04/richard-and-debbie-senates-book-on-lizzie-borden-ax-murder-mystery-is-selling-extremely-well.aspx

  • Lizzie’s Spurned Friend

     alicerussell.jpg

    Alice Russell, the former Borden neighbor and close family friend who testified about Lizzie burning a dress in the kitchen woodstove the day after the funeral services for Andrew and Abby Borden, lived very close to French Street and Maplecroft years after the acquittal. Miss Alice Russell, who was a bookkeeper, clerk and sewing teacher over the course of her employed years in the city, moved into the house above, #18 Hillside, with her mother in 1909 and continued to reside  in the two-family home until 1929.  

    Hillside is perhaps two blocks from French Street and Lizzie’s Maplecroft home. Lizzie and her sister Emma moved into Maplecroft in September of 1893, the autumn after Lizzie’s acquittal. Lizzie resided there until her death in 1927.  Older sister Emma left Maplecroft and her sister for reasons not entirely known in 1905, and is rumored never to have been in her sister’s physical presence again.

    Alice Russell earned Lizzie’s contempt after giving the damaging testimony about the burnt dress, and was no longer one of Lizzie’s intimate friends forever afterward.  With the two ladies living in such proximity, there must have been some awkward moments as they passed on the street over that eighteen year period.

    Alice Russell spent her days from 1930 until she died in 1941 at the Home for the Aged, now The Adams House, on Highland Avenue.  She is buried in Beech Grove Cemetery in nearby Westport.

    adamshouse.jpg

    Adams House today on Highland Avenue

  • Friends of Oak Grove in the News

    arch.jpg

    Yesterday’s Fall River Herald News featured a story on the new Friends group which has begun a program of planting trees at the historic Victorian cemetery. 

     http://www.heraldnews.com/town_info/history/x1565510740

    Oak Grove was begun in 1855 with a 47 acre parcel purchased from Dr. Nathan Durfee who sold it to the city for $200 per acre.  The entry arch was erected in 1873. The site http://oakgrovecemetery.wordpress.com features the Borden-Almy plot, Borden-related gravesites, and information on the Borden’s funeral.  Over 500 “hits” have come in over the past 24 hours to the site, with a lion’s share of visitors reading about how to become a member- with the Borden-related information a close second.  Lizzie still holds a fascination among the city’s population.

  • New photo joins other “Lizzies”

    newphoto.jpg

    The recently-found photograph of a young Lizzie in a straw hat has joined the other known photos on the bookshelf in the sitting room at the Borden house.  The room also contains the most famous one of Lizzie in Newport after the acquittal posed standing behind a chair- the only photo where she looks directly out at the photographer. 

    lizzie1893.jpg

     Some say she looks like the cat that swallowed the canary.  The Swansea Historical Society houses the new photo of little Lizzie, which is the youngest photo of Lizzie found to date.

    newphoto1.jpg

  • Big doings in the neighborhood

    kellyhouse.jpg 

    Lots of action in the neighborhood this week.  Dr. Kelly’s house next door to #92 is for sale along with the shop attached to the house next door to it.  Saint Mary’s across the street is being sandblasted and stones re-pointed, and work is continuing at an accelerated pace across the street on the new courthouse.  Hope the dust settles before August 4th!

    stmary2.jpg

    Old St. Mary’s Church

    stmary.jpg

  • Lizzie’s Church- A Fortune to Repair

    steeple.jpg

    The historic Central Congregational church at 100 Rock Street, now the Culinary Institute and Abbey Grille is undergoing emergency repairs to its steeple. After debris fell to the ground from the old spire a few weeks ago, the mayor has closed the street for a city block in front of the building, much to the dismay of merchants and businesses on the street.  Traffic is being re-routed until the facade is declared safe. Owner George Karousos said this week permanent repairs could cost $1.5 million to $2 million. Netting of the steeple began this week.  http://www.heraldnews.com/news/x1670184015

    grille.jpg

  • Emma’s Great Escape

    Lizzie’s quiet older sister Emma kept a great deal to herself and was of a retiring nature. The reason for her sudden 1905 departure from the shared domicile of Maplecroft is not known for certain but there is much speculation it had to do with Lizzie’s entertaining of theatre people including rising stage star Nance O’Neil, and possibly the frivolity at Maplecroft which might have included alcoholic beverages at these theatre party soirees. Emma lived in Fall River and Providence for the years following their separation, and just perhaps her trip to England and Scotland in 1906, which followed hard upon their split, was to get away from the unpleasantness on French Street. The passenger list gives her age as 55 at the time of the voyage- certainly mature for a first visit away from the country. There is no record found to date of any other foray into a wider world for quiet Emma.

    cymriclist.jpg

    The White Star liner Cymric

    cymric-01.jpg

  • If Bridget had gone shopping. . .

     sargent.jpg

    What remains of Sargent’s store today on North Main Street

    Much has been made about Lizzie Borden’s sudden mention of a sale of dress goods at Sargent’s store to the maid just before the murder of her father that Thursday morning. Bridget Sullivan, weary from washing the windows and doing chores all morning, paused to consider the news about the sale, and voiced the statement she hoped to get herself some of the dress yard goods. But with her morning nausea, and weariness from chores, she opted to rest upstairs on the third floor instead. It is about a ten minute walk to Sargent’s at average pace, so the maid would have been gone about 40 minutes, allowing time to travel back and forth, shop, and get back in time to begin the noonday meal had she gone to Sargent’s. Lizzie would have been left alone with her father. Did Lizzie suggest the sale to get the maid out of the house? The story may have ended very differently had Bridget stayed downstairs.

     sargentsale.jpg

    Original ad for the dress goods sale on August 4th

     

  • Garfield Tea-What was in that stuff?

    Andrew’s inexpensive cure- cheaper than a house call from Dr. Bowen!

    After passing a miserable night on August 2, 1892 due to stomach cramping and vomitting, Abby Borden went across the street to Doctor Bowen for a remedy on Wednesday morning and voiced the opinion that the family may be poisoned through the baker’s bread. He sent her home with directions to give castor oil a try, while Andrew Borden, too frugal to waste money on office visits, dosed himself with an over-the-counter preparation called Garfield Tea, named for the assasinated president.  Manufactured by the Stillman Remedies Co. of 58 West 55th Street in New York, the concoction was made entirely of herbs, chiefly senna leaves and crushed couch grass. The price of a box was 25 cents and the tea was made by putting a teaspoonsful in a cup, covering with 8 ounces of boiling water, and allowing the mix to steep for a couple of hours. Taken before retiring, it promised relief from liver problems, constipation, and stomach upset.  Andrew was still looking feeble on the morning of the murder, Thursday, August 4th in spite of his self medication although Abby was somewhat improved.