• Home
  • Articles
    • Abby’s Sisters
    • Another Side of Lizzie Borden
    • Bence & the Prussic Acid
    • Borden Funerals
    • The Borden Monument
    • Bowen’s Preliminary
    • Dr. Bowen
    • Dr. Kelly
    • Brownells of Fairhaven
    • Grand Tour
    • Lizzie’s Horses
    • Lizzie’s School Days
    • Murder in the Well
    • Nance O’Neil
    • Officer Medley
    • Victorian Fashion
    • W&W’s Writer
  • LizClipz
  • Dressing Miss Lizzie Fashions

Lizzie Borden : Warps & Wefts

~ News, articles and photos about The Lady, The Crime, The City and The Era

Lizzie Borden : Warps & Wefts

Tag Archives: Fall River Undertakers

Undertaker Winward

08 Friday Aug 2008

Posted by Shelley in Case Personalities, Fall River, Fall River Now and Then, Oak Grove Cemetery, Potpourri, Victoriana

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Borden Funeral, Fall River Undertakers, James E. Winward

James E. Winward was the man Lizzie Borden wanted immediately to undertake the funeral of her father.  On the day of the murders, just a very short time after Lizzie said she found her father on the sofa, she requested the services of Mr. Winward, who at the time had his business address at 13 South Main Street.  Even before the body of Abby Borden was found on the second floor, Lizzie was voicing the opinion that she would be the one to go down to Oak Grove Cemetery to arrange her father’s funeral and burial.  This may be construed as a curious statement as Mrs. Borden would have had this task herself-did Lizzie already know Mrs. Borden was lying dead upstairs?

Young Mr. Winward (aged only 38 on the day of the murders) came as requested, and was to find not one, but two bodies at #92 Second Street. He and his assistant had the grisly task of removing the heavily blood-stained sofa from the sitting room later in the day. 

Mr. Winward enjoyed a successful career in his field, and fitted the ideal of a funeral director in every aspect of appearance and decorum.  A photograph of Mr. Winward is soon to be published.  At the end of his life, Mr. James E. Winward lived in a prosperous section in the north end of the city on Madison Street.  He is buried with his wife Annie, his daughter Helen Winward Brown and his son-in-law in the cemetery where he spend  so many years organizing funerals for so many city clients- Oak Grove.

The role of Mr. Winward was ably performed by funeral director Andrew Correia for the recent August 4th re-enactments at # 92 Second Street.

Lizzie Borden Warps and Wefts

Lizzie Borden Warps and Wefts

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 336 other followers

Follow us on Youtube!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C1_TB4CnZLk&t=13s

Articles

  • Bence & the Prussic Acid
  • Visit to Maplecroft
  • Abby’s Sisters
  • Another Side of Lizzie Borden
  • Articles
  • Borden Funerals
  • Bowen’s Preliminary
  • Brownells of Fairhaven
  • Dr. Bowen
  • Dr. Kelly
  • Dressing Miss Lizzie Fashions
  • Grand Tour
  • LizClipz
  • Lizzie’s Horses
  • Lizzie’s School Days
  • Murder in the Well
  • Nance O’Neil
  • Officer Medley
  • Services
  • Site Policies
  • The Borden Monument
  • The Elegant Augusta Tripp
  • The Real William Moody- A Muttoneater Quest
  • Victorian Fashion
  • W&W’s Writer
Warps-The threads which run lengthwise in a woven fabric, crossed at right angles to the weft. Wefts-The horizontal threads interlaced through the warp in a woven fabric. In 1876, Fall River had 1/6th of all New England cotton capacity and one-half of all print cloth production. The "Spindle City" as it became known, was second in the world to only Manchester, England.

Carved In Maplecroft’s Mantel

And old time friends and twilight plays, And starry nights and sunny days. Come trooping up the misty ways, When my fires burn low.

Lizzie and those pigeons

Lizzie's Inquest Testimony

Q. Can you tell of the killing of any animal? Or any other operation that would lead to their being cast there, with blood on them?
A. No sir. He killed some pigeons in the barn last May or June.
Q. What with?
A. I don't know, but I thought he wrung their necks.
Q. What made you think so?
A. I think he said so.
Q. Did anything else make you think so?
A. All but three or four had their heads on. That is what made me think so.
Q. Did all of them come into the house?
A. I think so.
Q. Those that came into the house were all headless?
A. Two or three had them on.
Q. Were any with their heads off?
A. Yes sir.
Q. Cut off or twisted off?
A. I don't know which.
Q. How did they look?
A. I don't know, their heads were gone, that is all.
Q. Did you tell anybody they looked as though they were twisted off?
A. I don't remember whether I did or not. The skin, I think, was very tender. I said, "Why are these heads off?" I think I remember of telling somebody that he said they twisted off.
Q. Did they look as if they were cut off?
A. I don't know. I did not look at that particularly.
Q. Is there anything else besides that that would lead, in your opinion so far as you can remember, to the finding of instruments in the cellar with blood on them?
A. I know of nothing else that was done.

Categories

Blog at WordPress.com.

Cancel