She didn"t really have a relation with her neighbors. She and her sister never married also. She was not not put in jail for the murder of her parents.
Lizzie borden killed her father and her stepmother. she was the one who had something against her stepmother. she also had something against her father because he married the stepmother.
When Lizzie was younger, father and daughter seemed to have a relationship of mutual love and a guarded respect for each other. As Lizzie grew up and older and remained in her father's home instead of marrying and starting her own family, the house on 92 2nd Street became increasingly crowded. It was no secret to anyone who knew the Borden's that Andrew's 'girls' did not get on well with Abby, Andrew's second wife and Emma and Lizzie's stepmother. If fact Emma and Lizzie did not take meals with the elder Bordens, preferring to eat off a tray in their upstairs rooms. This is a significant situation considering the era in which they lived. The tension in the home was oppressive at times. By all accounts Lizzie was the favored daughter, possibly because she was too much like Andrew. Headstrong and willful, Lizzie may have done better out of her father's home but 19th century etiquette discouraged young ladies leaving their father's house unless married or in a convent. Lizzie did neither.
In his book "Lizzie" author Frank Spiering claimed that Lizzie's sister Emma was not where everyone thought she was, and was indeed the killer. Lizzie and Emma were furious over a family dispute over a piece of real estate that Andrew Borden had given to his wife's side of the family. Abby Borden was Emma and Lizzie's stepmother, so to see some of their property going to someone 'outside' the immediate family caused a rift that could not be overcome.
Actress Nance O'Neil had a close friendship with Lizzie Borden, it was rumoured that their relationship was romantic
The hatchet that was used to kill the Bordens is now in the Lizzy Borden museum in Fall River, MA. It was found in the celler of the Borden's house with traces of blood and a broken handle.
Until her death in 1927, Lizzie Borden lived her entire life in Fall River Massachusetts. At the time of the murders the Bordens lived at 92 2nd St. After her aquittal Lizzie and her older sister Emma moved to 306 French St., a more fashionable neighborhood and a much larger house. As of June 1, 1927 Lizzie has resided at Oak Grove Cemetery along side her father Andrew, real mother Sarah, and sisters Emma and Alice Ester*. *Alice Ester Borden died before Lizzie was born, she was about two years old at the time of her death.
The nature of the relationship between Borden and O'Neil may differ depending on who you ask. My own opinion, based on my research, is that it is very possible the friendship between the two women may have been romantic (sexual). It has been speculated that this "friendship" was the catalyst for the falling out of Lizzie and older sister Emma Borden. Emma moved out of Maplecroft, and the two remained estranged for the rest of their lives. At the time of their deaths, just weeks apart, Lizzie, or "Lizbeth" as she liked to be called, had spent a great portion of her inheritance, while Emma, who lived a very simple and fugal life, retained the bulk of her father's money plus interest. The combination of Lizzie's inappropriate relationship with the actress O'Neil and suspicion of her sister's guilt in the murder of the elder Bordens, it is not at all surprising that there was a rift between the siblings that was irreparable.
I see where you're going with this and there is absolutely no evidence that there was an inappropriate relationship between Lizzie and her father Andrew.
His point was that a young woman of Lizzie's breeding and class would not have done such a horrendous thing to members of her own family. For us living in the 21st century we know all too well that murder knows no boundries of class or money.
i dont now
kroger
friendly, nice but not all the time