"Lizzie Borden took an axe/And gave her mother forty whacks/When she saw what she had done/She gave her father forty-one," goes the quippy jump-rope rhyme dedicated to the controversial Victorian woman.
On August 4, 1892, Lizzie Borden's father Andrew and stepmother Abby were found mutilated in their house in Fall River, Massachusetts, having been savagely struck 10 or 11 and 19 times respectively (the rhyme got it wrong) with a hatchet-like weapon. Local policemen soon spotted contradictions and inconsistencies in the testimony of daughter Lizzie, who was suspiciously nonchalant. They put her behind bars seven days later, charged her with the murders and released her 10 months later, after a jury found her not guilty.
Yet, to this day, Lizzie Borden still has a reputation as a well-to-do woman who managed to get away with murder.
We spoke with Erika Mailman, author, journalist and expert on the Lizzie Borden case, having recently released a historical novel "The Murderer's Maid," which tells the story from the point of view of Bridget Sullivan, Borden's maid.
You believe Lizzie Borden was the perpetrator of her parents' murders. There have been a lot of theories about a possible motive. Which one do you subscribe to?
Lizzie was fueled by a complex amalgam of motives. She lived in an era when women were not supposed to go anywhere without a chaperone. She despised her father's miserly control of her life, she had just come back from a Grand Tour of Europe where she'd seen many fine things she wanted. [I believe] she was greedy, unhinged and demoralized. Seeing her sister, who was nearly a decade older (Lizzie was 32 at the time of the murders) still living in the house was a stark example of what she could look forward to: sewing in small rooms and visits with friends of equally-lowered circumstances.