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You can sleep in the actual murder house from America’s most famous unsolved case

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FALL RIVER, MA –5 MAR 2022- View of the Lizzie Border murder house, now a bed and breakfast located in Fall River, Massachusetts.

Fall River’s most infamous address still runs cold

On Aug. 4, 1892, someone killed Andrew and Abby Borden inside their home on Second Street in Fall River, Massachusetts. No one was ever convicted.

The house is still standing. Now you can walk through every room where it happened, sleep in the bed where one victim was found, and eat breakfast in the same room where the bodies were examined.

Fall River keeps the story alive because the story never really ended.

92 Second St, Fall River, MA, the home of Lizzie Borden at the time of the murders as it appeared in 1892

The murders that still don’t have an answer

Andrew Borden was a wealthy bank president. He bought the Greek Revival home on Second Street in 1872, and on the morning of Aug. 4, 1892, someone struck him and his wife, Abby, with a hatchet while they were inside.

His daughter, Lizzie, 32 years old, was home that morning along with the maid, Bridget Sullivan. Lizzie was arrested, tried, and acquitted in June 1893 after the jury deliberated for about 90 minutes.

No one else was ever charged. The case sits officially unsolved.

Lizzie Borden House

Walk through all three floors of the crime scene

The guided house tour runs 90 minutes and covers every floor of the home. Guides walk you through each room and lay out what happened where on that August morning.

You see both spots where the victims were found. If you want to go further, an optional basement extension takes you down to where investigators discovered the broken hatchet head.

Tours run daily between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m., and the pace is slow enough that nothing gets glossed over.

retro silverware tea set, Victorian era, served outdoors on the veranda

Tea sandwiches and dark stories in period costume

The Victorian afternoon tea is the lightest thing on the menu here.

Actors dressed as Lizzie and Emma Borden host the event in period clothing while you eat tea sandwiches, scones, and sweets.

Between bites, you get a lesson in 1800s tea etiquette woven together with details from the Borden case.

It’s a different way into the story, more drawing room than crime scene, and it works if you want the history without the grim parts front and center.

Erected in 1845, the home was originally a two family and was later made into a single family by Andrew J. Borden. Andrew J. Borden bought the house at 92 Second Street to be close to his bank and various downtown businesses. The Bed & Breakfast is named after Andrew J. Borden’s youngest daughter, Lizzie. Although she was tried and acquitted of the murders she was ostracized by the community of Fall River. Lizzie Borden and the murders....Lizzie Andrew Borden (July 19, 1860 – June 1, 1927) was a New England spinster who was the only suspect for the hatchet murders of her father and stepmother on August 4, 1892 in Fall River, Massachusetts. The murders, subsequent trial, and following trial by media became a cause célèbre. The fame of the incident has endured in American pop culture and criminology. Although Lizzie Borden was acquitted, she was at the time (and is to an extent today) widely believed to be guilty: no one else was ever arrested or tried, and she has remained notorious in American folklore. Dispute over the identity of the killer or killers continues to this day. During the morning of August 4, 1892, Borden's father, Andrew Jackson Borden, and her stepmother, Abby Durfee Borden, were murdered in the family home. The only other people present at the residence at the time were Lizzie and the family maid, Bridget Sullivan. Emma Borden, Lizzie's sister, was away from home. The Borden sisters' uncle, John Vinnicum Morse, brother of Andrew Borden's first wife, was visiting at the time, but was also away from the house during the time of the murders. That day, Andrew Borden had gone into town to do his usual rounds at the bank and post office. He returned home at about 10:45 a.m. About a half-hour later, Lizzie Borden found his body. According to Sullivan's testimony, she was lying down in her room on the third floor of the house shortly after 11:00 a.m. when she heard Lizzie call to her, saying someone had killed her father, whose body was found slumped on a couch in the downstairs sitting room. Andrew Borden's face was turned to the right hand side, apparently at ease as if he were asleep. Shortly thereafter, while Lizzie Borden was being tended by neighbors and the family doctor, Sullivan discovered the body of Mrs. Borden upstairs in the guest bedroom. Mr. and Mrs. Borden had both been killed by blows from a hatchet, which in the case of Andrew Borden, not only crushed his skull but cleanly split his left eyeball. Over a period of years after the death of the first Mrs. Borden, life at 92 Second Street had grown unpleasant in many ways, and affection between the older and younger family members had waned considerably if any was present at all. The upstairs floor of the house was divided. The front was the territory of the Borden sisters, while the rear was for Mr. and Mrs. Borden. Meals were not always eaten together. Conflict had increased between the two daughters and their father about his decision to divide valuable property among relatives before his death. Relatives of their stepmother had been given a house, and John Morse, brother to the deceased Sarah Borden (the mother of the Borden daughters), had come to visit that week. His visit was to facilitate transfer of farm property, which included what had been a summer home for the Borden daughters. Shortly before the murders, a major argument had occurred which resulted in both sisters leaving home on extended "vacations". Lizzie Borden, however, decided to end her trip and returned early. She was refused the purchase of prussic acid (hydrogen cyanide) by local druggist Eli Bence, which she claimed was for cleaning a seal skin coat. Shortly before the murders, the entire household became violently ill. As Mr. Borden was not a popular man in town, Mrs. Borden feared they were being poisoned, but the family doctor diagnosed it as bad food. Lizzie Borden was arrested on August 11, 1892, with her trial beginning ten months later in New Bedford, Massachusetts. Her stories proved to be inconsistent, and her behavior suspect. She was tried for the murders, defended by former Massachusetts Governor George D. Robinson and Andrew V. Jennings. One of the prosecutors in the trial was William H. Moody, future United States Attorney General and Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court. During the police investigation, a hatchet was found in the basement and was assumed to be the murder weapon. Though it was clean, most of its handle was missing and the prosecution stated that it had been broken off because it was covered with blood. However, police officer Michael Mullaly stated that he found it next to a hatchet handle. Deputy Marshall John Fleet contradicted this testimony. Later a forensics expert said there was no time for the hatchet to be cleaned after the murder. The prosecution was hampered by the fact that the Fall River police did not put credence in the new forensic technology of fingerprinting, and refused to take prints on the hatchet. No blood-soaked clothing was found as evidence by police. A few days after the murder, Borden tore apart and burned a light blue Bedford cord cotton dress in the kitchen stove, claiming she had brushed against fresh baseboard paint which had smeared on it. Despite incriminating circumstances, Lizzie Borden was acquitted by a jury after an hour and a half's deliberation. The fact that no murder weapon was found and no blood evidence was noted just a few minutes after the second murder pointed to reasonable doubt. Her entire original inquest testimony was barred from the trial. Also excluded was testimony regarding her attempt to purchase prussic acid. Adding to the doubt was another axe murder in the area, perpetrated by José Correira, which took place shortly before the trial. While many details were similar, Correira was not in the country when the Borden murder took place. After the trial Borden and her sister moved to a new house called Maplecroft.[5] In June 1905, the two argued over a party Lizzie gave for Nance O'Neil and a group of actors. Shortly after that, Emma moved out of the house, and Lizzie Borden began using the name "Lizbeth A. Borden". Lizzie Borden died of pneumonia on June 1, 1927 in Fall River, Massachusetts. The funeral details were not made public and few people attended her burial. Borden was buried in Oak Grove Cemetery under the name "Lizbeth Andrew Borden", her footstone reading "Lizbeth". Her will, probated on June 25, 1927, left $30,000 to the Fall River Animal Rescue League. She also left $500 in perpetual trust for the care of her father's grave. Nine days later, her estranged sister, Emma Lenora Borden, died from a fall in Newmarket, New Hampshire, on June 10, 1927. The house on Second Street where the murders occurred is now a bed and breakfast. Maplecroft, the mansion Borden bought after her acquittal, on then-fashionable French Street in the "highlands" is privately owned, and only occasionally available for touring. Several theories have been presented over the years suggesting Lizzie Borden may not have committed the murders, and that other suspects may have had possible motives. One theory is that the maid, Bridget Sullivan, did it; possibly out of outrage for being asked to clean the windows, a taxing job on a hot day, just a day after having suffered from food poisoning. Another potential culprit was forwarded by Arnold R. Brown in his work, Lizzie Borden: The Legend, The Truth, The Final Chapter, in which Brown theorizes that the true culprit was an illegitimate paternal half-brother named William Borden, as a revenge killing in his failed efforts to extort money from his father. Yet another theory is that Borden suffered petit mal epileptic seizures during her menstrual cycle, at which times she entered a dream-like state, and unknowingly committed the murders. The book Lizzie by Evan Hunter posed the theory that Lizzie Borden had an affair with the actress Nance O'Neil, whom she met in Boston in 1904. In the early 20th century, it was still considered socially unacceptable for women to become actresses. O'Neil was a spendthrift, always in financial trouble, and Borden came from a wealthy background. The two got along, despite Borden's notoriety. While there has never been any significant evidence that the two were intimate, the friendship was cited as the cause of Borden's final separation from her sister, Emma. O'Neil was later a character in the musical about Lizzie Borden, entitled Lizzie Borden: A Musical Tragedy in Two Axe, where she was played by Suellen Vance. Feminist Carolyn Gage refers to O'Neil as an overt lesbian, and although there are few documented details of any affairs, Gage claimed that her sexual orientation was well known in entertainment circles, despite her marriage. The trial received a tremendous amount of national publicity. It has been compared to the later trials of Bruno Hauptmann, Ethel and Julius Rosenberg and O.J. Simpson as a landmark in media coverage of legal proceedings. The case was memorialized in a popular jump-rope rhyme: Lizzie Borden took an axe And gave her mother forty whacks. When she saw what she had done She gave her father forty-one. The anonymous rhyme was made up by a writer as an alluring little tune to sell newspapers even though in reality her stepmother suffered 18 or 19 blows, her father 11. Though acquitted for the crimes, Lizzie Borden was ostracized by neighbors following the trial. Lizzie Borden's name was again brought to the public forefront when she was accused of shoplifting in 1897. Genealogy Borden was distantly related to the American milk processor Gail Borden (1801–1874) and Robert Borden (1854–1937), Canada's Prime Minister during World War I. Elizabeth Montgomery and Lizzie Borden were sixth cousins once removed, both descending from 17th-century Massachusetts resident John Luther. Rhonda McClure, the genealogist who documented the Montgomery-Borden connection, said, "I wonder how Elizabeth would have felt if she knew she was playing her own cousin.

After dark, the city’s other haunted corners come out

The nightly ghost tour takes you outside and walks you through Fall River on foot, hitting the Borden house and other spots around the city with their own dark histories.

The focus stays on documented accounts and local lore rather than theatrics. An extended version includes a walk through the first floor of the house itself.

The evening setting does a lot of the work.

The streets around this part of Fall River are quiet after dark, and the stories land differently when you’re standing in them.

A ghost hunter is seen using an advanced EMF detector to measure of any paranormal activity in an old haunted hotel in the UK.

EMF detectors, spirit boxes and the basement at midnight

Ghost hunts happen on the first floor and in the basement, and the house splits visitors into two groups of up to 13 people each. Before the lights go out, you get a short rundown of the case.

Then one group takes the first floor, where Andrew Borden was found on the sofa, while the other heads down to the basement. Each group gets ghost-hunting equipment: EMF detectors, spirit boxes, the full setup.

What you make of the readings is up to you.

Lizzie Borden House

Six rooms to choose from, including the one where Abby died

The house has two suites and four individual rooms for overnight stays. The Lizzie and Emma Suite includes the actual bedrooms the sisters used.

The Andrew and Abby Suite is the only room with a private bathroom.

The John V. Morse room, where Abby Borden was found, remains one of the most requested rooms in the house.

Overnight guests clear out between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. so the daily tours can run through, then the place is yours again.

Fall River, MA, USA May 18 A sign at the Lizzie Borden Bed and Breakfast, hangs site of the infamous murder, in Fall River, Massachusetts

The Bordens’ last breakfast, served again every morning

Overnight guests can add breakfast for an extra fee.

The menu pulls from what the Borden family ate on the morning of the murders: pancakes, eggs, bacon, oatmeal, salad and fruit.

The original items from that morning, mutton and johnnycakes, got cut after most guests passed on them. You eat in the dining room where the post-mortem examinations took place after the bodies were brought in.

That detail comes up. Whether it changes how the food tastes is between you and your appetite.

Where Father was Hacked

Crime scene photos guided every detail of the restoration

The house was restored to match its 1892 appearance as closely as possible.

Investigators used crime scene photographs and written records to place wallpaper, carpets and decor back where they belonged.

The furnishings are period-accurate reproductions, set in the same positions as the originals. Original hardware, doors and woodwork stayed intact throughout.

Before you leave, the gift shop carries Lizzie Borden-themed merchandise and books on the case, ranging from true crime deep dives to more skeptical takes on what actually happened.

Richard Borden (1795-1874) and Borden family graves at Oak Grove Cemetery, Fall River MA.

The Bordens’ graves are 1.5 miles down the road

Oak Grove Cemetery opened in 1855 and covers more than 100 acres behind a Gothic Revival granite arch. A guided walking tour launched in March 2024 takes you to the graves of Andrew, Abby, Lizzie and Emma Borden.

The route also passes other notable Fall River figures, including veterans and inventors buried across the grounds. The tour covers about 1.5 miles on foot and runs for about an hour.

It’s worth doing the day before or after your house visit when the names on the headstones already mean something.

Lizzie Borden house

Lizzie’s mansion and the world’s largest Borden archive

After her acquittal, Lizzie used her inheritance to buy a mansion she named Maplecroft on French Street, in the upscale Hill neighborhood she had long wanted to live in.

The house is a private residence, but you can see it from the street.

Across town, the Fall River Historical Society holds the world’s largest collection of Lizzie Borden documents, photographs and artifacts.

Together, Maplecroft and the Historical Society fill in the parts of the story that happened after the trial ended.

Fall River, MA, USA May 18 The Destroyer USS Joseph Kennedy, Battleship USS Massachusetts and the submarine USS Lionfish are on display at Battleship Cove in Fall River Heritage State Park, MA

Fall River has a full day’s worth beyond the murder house

Battleship Cove sits just 0.6 miles from the Lizzie Borden House and holds the world’s largest collection of historic naval ships. You can board the World War II battleship USS Massachusetts and walk through a submarine.

Fall River Heritage State Park runs a boardwalk along the Taunton River with views of the Braga Bridge.

The city also has a deep Portuguese heritage that shows up in its bakeries and restaurants, places that have fed the same neighborhoods for decades.

Boston is about an hour north, and Providence is roughly 30 minutes away.

FALL RIVER, MA –5 MAR 2022- View of the Lizzie Border murder house, now a bed and breakfast located in Fall River, Massachusetts.

Visit the Lizzie Borden House in Fall River, Massachusetts

You can find the house at 230 Second St. in Fall River, Massachusetts.

It opens daily at 10:30 a.m. and stays open until 1 a.m. House tours, ghost tours, ghost hunts, the Victorian tea, cemetery tours and overnight stays are all bookable through the official website.

October fills up fast, so book ahead if that’s when you plan to go.

The house sits within walking distance of Battleship Cove, Fall River Heritage State Park and downtown, so give yourself a full day.

This article was created with AI assistance and human editing.

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John Ghost is a professional writer and SEO director. He graduated from Arizona State University with a BA in English (Writing, Rhetorics, and Literacies). As he prepares for graduate school to become an English professor, he writes weird fiction, plays his guitars, and enjoys spending time with his wife and daughters. He lives in the Valley of the Sun. Learn more about John on Muck Rack.

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