First published August 20, 2016, by Miles Mathis
As usual, this is just my opinion, arrived at by personal research on the internet.
This one was pretty easy, since the solution was obvious on a first reading of her Wikipedia page.
Lizzie Andrew Borden (July 19, 1860 – June 1, 1927) was an American woman who was tried and acquitted of the August 4, 1892 axe murders of her father and stepmother in Fall River, Massachusetts. No one else was charged in the murders, and, despite ostracism from other residents, Borden spent the remainder of her life in Fall River. She died of pneumonia at the age of 66, just days before the death of her older sister, Emma. The Borden murders and trial received widespread publicity in the United States and have remained a topic in American popular culture depicted in numerous films, theatrical productions, literary works, and folk rhymes around the Fall River area.
But the research did end up yielding some other interesting things, as usual.
Her father is the key here.
His early wealth came from selling furniture and caskets.
Caskets is the first clue on the page, since it shows him as a sort of “death insider”.
A casket maker might have an inside track in faking a death, mightn’t he?
The father was named Andrew Jackson Borden.
He was born in Fall River, Massachusetts, where the murders were later faked.
That is about 20 miles south of Boston and only ten miles east of Providence, RI.
Given that location, my first question would be,
“Did he have any ancestors at the Salem Witch Trial?”
The Salem Witch Trials WERE FAKED – Library of Rickandria
We quickly find a Lizzie Borden Museum in Salem, which tells us we are on the right track.
The next thing we discover is that Lizzie’s mother was a Morse, and her maternal grandmother was a Morrison.
That’s curious, considering all the things we have discovered about the Morrison family recently.
See my paper on Jim Morrison, for instance.
OPENING DOORS – Library of Rickandria
That family has been involved in many hoaxes, including the Gulf of Tonkin false flag and the fake death of Jim Morrison.
But it gets better.
The Morse family has been involved in the witch hoax from even before Salem.
See Elizabeth Morse, the very first New England witch.
She was indicted in 1680, more than a decade before the Salem Witch Trials.
Her trial was in Newbury, also Essex County, about ten miles north of Salem.
Abby Borden’s grandmother was Elizabeth Woodman, and there were Woodmans involved in the Newbury witch trial of Elizabeth Morse in 1680.
Edward Woodman was one of the accusers.
Lizzie’s 2g-grandmother was Susanna Tripp.
We also find famous witches that were Tripps, including Sally Tripp, the witch of Hurricane (Falmouth) from 1767.
Falmouth is also Massachusetts, just north of Martha’s Vineyard and just across Buzzard’s Bay from Fall River.
Susanna’s stepmother was Sybil Chase.
So, the Chases are involved in this mess as well.
We will find them again several times below.
This should also remind you of Linda Tripp, involved in the Monica Lewinsky hoax.
The Monica Lewinsky Scandal was faked – Library of Rickandria
Another 2g-grandmother of Lizzie was Mary Eddy. See my previous papers for more on the Eddys, including Mary Baker Eddy and the Eddy brothers of Theosophy fame.
From Theosophy to the Beat Generation or How even the Occult was Disguised – Library of Rickandria
One of Mary Eddy’s sons was named Israel. Although Mary was born in 1750, her parents are “private” at Geni.com.
Not unknown, but private.
Why would people dead 266 years need privacy?
Alleged victim Abby Borden, Lizzie’s stepmother, was the daughter of Oliver Gray.
There were several Grays involved in witch trials, including Samuel Gray, an alleged victim of Bridget Bishop in Salem.
Bridget Bishop (c. 1632 – 10 June 1692) was the first person executed for witchcraft during the Salem witch trials in 1692. Nineteen were hanged, and one, Giles Corey, was pressed to death. Altogether, about 200 people were tried.
Bishop was allegedly the first one hanged in Salem.
But in the later Salem Witch Trial of 1878—just 14 years before the Borden event—we find a Horace Gray as the judge.
Salem witchcraft trial (1878) – Wikipedia
We also find Eddys, including Mary Baker Eddy herself.
Mary Baker Eddy (nee Baker; July 16, 1821 – December 3, 1910) was an American religious leader and author who founded The Church of Christ, Scientist, in New England in 1879. She also founded The Christian Science Monitor in 1908, and three religious magazines: the Christian Science Sentinel, The Christian Science Journal, and The Herald of Christian Science. She wrote numerous books and articles, the notable of which were Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures and Manual of The Mother Church. Other works were edited posthumously into the Prose Works Other than Science and Health.
Eddy traveled to Salem to testify against the accused warlock Daniel Spofford.
Spofford had been Eddy’s lieutenant and publisher, but they soon came to loggerheads.
First, she expelled him and then sued him for failure to pay her tuition for her Christian Science teachings.
She lost.
Furious, she instructed one of her proteges, Lucretia Brown, to accuse Spofford of Malicious Animal Magnetism, or what we would call witchcraft.
WITCHCRAFT – Library of Rickandria
She lost that one, too.
The Grays are also still at it:
we saw them in my later papers on Christchurch and Port Arthur.
In the Morse line, we also find a Merab Newson, b. 1699.
That might have been Newton, and there were Newtons at the Salem Witch Trial, including one of the prosecuting attorneys.
Merab was from Essex County.
We also find a Sarah Eastman in the same line.
Sarah Morse (Tucker) (1670 – 1726) – Genealogy (geni.com)
There were Eastmans involved in the Salem Witch Trial.
Nathaniel Eastman (1643-1709) – Find a Grave Memorial
Two of them signed a petition concerning the accused Mary Bradbury.
This Bradbury was an ancestor of Ray Bradbury, the famous 20th c. author.
Ray Douglas Bradbury (US: /ˈbrædbɛri/ BRAD-berr-ee; August 22, 1920 – June 5, 2012) was an American author and screenwriter. One of the most celebrated 20th-century American writers, he worked in a variety of genres, including fantasy, science fiction, horror, mystery, and realistic fiction.
Eastmans were involved in later hoaxes as well, including Max Eastman involved in the Eugene Debs hoax and Linda Eastman involved in the Paul McCartney hoax.
Max Forrester Eastman (January 4, 1883 – March 25, 1969) was an American writer on literature, philosophy and society, a poet and a prominent political activist. Moving to New York City for graduate school, Eastman became involved with radical circles in Greenwich Village. He supported socialism and became a leading patron of the Harlem Renaissance and an activist for a number of liberal and radical causes. For several years, he edited The Masses. With his sister Crystal Eastman, he co-founded in 1917 The Liberator, a radical magazine of politics and the arts.
Eugene Debs: Secret Agent Man – Library of Rickandria
They were both Jewish.
Exposing the Jews – Library of Rickandria
If we go back one more generation in the Morse line, we find an Anne Cox.
Peter Morse (1637 – 1702) – Genealogy (geni.com)
A Mary Cox was imprisoned in Malden for witchcraft.
Malden is about 15 miles from Salem.
Coxes were also involved in the recent Christchurch hoax.
CHRISTCHURCH MASSACRE – Library of Rickandria
In the same Morse line, we find a Mary Tucker.
Mary Morse (Tucker) (c.1721 – c.1790) – Genealogy (geni.com)
We just found Tuckers in the lines of Eustace Mullins and Ezra Pound.
Eustace Mullins was an Anti – Library of Rickandria
Ezra’s mother-in-law was Olivia Tucker.
Lizzie’s paternal grandmother was Phoebe Davenport, and the Davenports are also connected to the Salem Witch Trials.
Elizabeth Hathorne, ancestor of Nathaniel Hawthorne, was married to Capt. Richard Davenport, and they owned the famous Witch House in Salem before Judge Corwin did.
The Salem Witch House History | Salem, MA Patch
Before we move on, I wish to pause on that link, since we learn some things there that help us understand the fake Salem Witch Trials.
I hadn’t realized that Salem was the seat of the New Jerusalem, and that the word Salem meant peace in Hebrew.
It is a variation of Shalom.
If we take that back to my paper on Salem and plug it into all information I found there, it helps us read it.
It appears that Salem may have been founded by crypto-Jews, since we are told that by the time of Roger Conant’s arrival in 1623, there was already opposition from Salem to the Puritan authorities in Plymouth.
Conant’s mother was Agnes Clarke, which surname we have seen come up in almost every paper I have written in the past year, going back to the Tiger Woods paper.
Is Tiger Woods a PSYOP? – Library of Rickandria
Salem founder John Endecott may also have been from a Jewish line, since nothing is known of him.
John Endecott (also spelled Endicott; before 1600 – 15 March 1664/1665), regarded as one of the Fathers of New England, was the longest-serving governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, which became the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. He served a total of 16 years, including most of the last 15 years of his life. When not serving as governor, he was involved in other elected and appointed positions from 1628 to 1665 except for the single year of 1634.
It is always a red flag when expected information is buried.
We should know more about such a prominent person, but mysteriously don’t.
We will have to pursue that line another time:
it would swamp this paper.
So, the answer is a resounding yes:
Lizzie Borden’s ancestry is swamped with connections to Salem and fake witches.
The Great Harry Potter Hoax – Library of Rickandria
It would be difficult to find an ancestry with more connections.
This confirms my first guess, since if Salem was a hoax, the Borden murders probably were, too.
As we have seen, these hoaxes run in families.
The next major clue—and possibly the biggest clue in the entire mystery—is Andrew Borden’s occupation after casket merchant.
In short, he was a wealthy banker.
What are the odds?
In all of these hoaxes, everyone’s father is a wealthy banker.
A fake events researcher would think the world was populated by nothing but wealthy bankers.
Global Banking System – Library of Rickandria
Borden was involved with several banks and also owned extensive properties in the area.
He was president of the Union Savings Bank and the director of another bank.
He also directed several textile mills.
At the time of his death, his estate was said to be valued at around $8 million, in today’s dollars.
However, I suspect he was worth a lot more than that.
Being the head of at least two banks and at least three textile mills would generate far more income than that over the years.
I would assume his estate was valued at so little because he took most of it with him when he fled to South American or wherever.
The eight million is just what he left for his children.
This is a huge clue for at least two reasons:
one, note the professions—banking and textiles, the number one and number two most famous Jewish professions.
Two, since Borden was involved in more than one major bank, the odds are high that he got into some sort of pecuniary trouble, requiring extraordinary measures to extricate himself.
We have also seen that many times, with bankers:
- hiding assets
- fleeing the country
- faking their deaths
The most recent example is Kenneth Lay (Enron), whom many suspect of faking his death and moving to South America or somewhere.
Kenneth Lee Lay (April 15, 1942 – July 5, 2006) was an American businessman who was the founder, chief executive officer and chairman of Enron. He was heavily involved in Enron’s accounting scandal that unraveled in 2001 into the largest bankruptcy ever to that date. Lay was indicted by a grand jury and was found guilty of 10 counts of securities fraud at trial. Lay died in July 2006 while vacationing in his house near Aspen, Colorado, three months before his scheduled sentencing. A preliminary autopsy reported Lay died of a heart attack caused by coronary artery disease. His death resulted in a vacated judgment. Conspiracy theories regarding Lay’s death surfaced, alleging that it was faked.Lay left behind “a legacy of shame” characterized by “mismanagement and dishonesty”. In 2009 a list posted on Portfolio.com ranked Lay as the third-worst American CEO of all time. His actions were the catalyst for subsequent and fundamental corporate reform in regard to “standards of leadership, governance, and accountability”. Lay was one of America’s highest-paid CEOs; between 1998 and 2001, he collected more than $220 million in cash and stock in Enron, selling 1.7 million of those shares. However, during his trial in 2006, Lay claimed that Enron stock made up about 90% of his wealth, and that his net worth at that time was negative $250,000.
See also Aubrey Price, a Georgia banker sentenced to 30 years in 2014 for faking his suicide in order to avoid prosecution for embezzlement.
Georgia Banker Who Faked Death Gets 30 Years in Prison (nbcnews.com)
Also, Marcus Schrenker, sentenced to ten years in 2009 for trying to fake his death.
Also, Randy Mainwaring, who tried to fake his death in Oregon in 2006.
Ex-banker from Oregon who faked his own death survives stabbing – oregonlive.com
But the most interesting cases are of course the unadmitted ones.
Another clue in this direction is the presence of Lizzie’s uncle John Morse, her real mother’s brother.
Like Andrew Borden, he was a wealthy older man, well versed in financial matters.
His presence would be useful not only in settling family affairs, but in managing the event after Andrew Borden and his wife disappeared.
He was probably the one who dealt with the local police, for instance.
Conveniently, he arrived the day before the fake murders.
Another clue is that Andrew Borden’s current wife Abby (Lizzie’s stepmother) was also killed.
In real life, it would be exceedingly difficult to kill two people in the same household at different times, especially with an ax.
It would be hard enough to kill them at the same time, because even if they were asleep, the killing of one would wake the other.
But killing them at separate times in the same house with an ax would be next to impossible.
However, once we see it was all faked, we see why Abby Borden needed to appear to be killed as well:
Andrew wished to take her with him.
And then we find the fact that Andrew Borden was giving away real estate to relatives in the weeks and months leading up to the event.
This is spun to make us think Lizzie was mad about her inheritance being squandered on step-relatives, but the more obvious explanation is also the more likely.
That explanation is that Andrew Borden was tidying up his affairs before “dying”.
But since there is no indication that he was sick or injured in any way, this is indication of prior knowledge of his upcoming “death”.
He wanted to be sure his loved ones were taken care of while he was in hiding.
The next major clue is the guilty act Lizzie put on to draw attention away from the truth.
She purposely said many incriminating things, but for some reason the police never pursued any of them.
In fact, the police never tried to solve the crime at all, as we will see in more detail below.
But for now, let’s stick with Lizzie’s act.
Did you know Lizzie’s best friend was a famous actress?
That is Nance O’Neil.
Gertrude Lamson (October 8, 1874 – February 7, 1965), known professionally as Nance O’Neil or Nancy O’Neil, was an American stage and film actress who performed in plays in various theaters around the world but worked predominantly in the United States between the 1890s and 1930s. At the height of her career, she was promoted on theater bills and in period trade publications and newspapers as the “American Bernhardt”.
She was called the American Sarah Bernhardt.
Sarah Bernhardt (French: [saʁa bɛʁnɑʁt]; born Henriette-Rosine Bernard; 22 October 1844 – 26 March 1923) was a French stage actress who starred in some of the most popular French plays of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, including La Dame aux Camélias by Alexandre Dumas fils, Ruy Blas by Victor Hugo, Fédora and La Tosca by Victorien Sardou, and L’Aiglon by Edmond Rostand. She played female and male roles, including Shakespeare’s Hamlet. Rostand called her “the queen of the pose and the princess of the gesture”, and Hugo praised her “golden voice”. She made several theatrical tours worldwide and was one of the early prominent actresses to make sound recordings and act in motion pictures.
She appeared in:
- MacBeth
- Hedda Gabler
- Trilby
and many other plays.
Later she went to Hollywood and appeared in silent movies and then talkies.
STRANGE RELATIONS – Library of Rickandria
She played Empress Alexandra in 1917’s The Fall of the Romanovs, which I mentioned in my paper on Lenin.
Vladimir Lenin is Another Fake – Library of Rickandria
Since the Romanovs actually fell in 1917, it should be somewhat curious to see a film with that title in the same year.
And that is a very strange link in this puzzle, one so strange it looks like another clue.
Also curious is that O’Neil was a resident in old age of Lilian Booth Actors Home.
Lillian Booth Actors Home – Wikipedia
Booth is sold to us as a philanthropist but note the last name.
She was related to John Wilkes Booth.
Speaking of relations, we aren’t told where Nance O’Neil got that last name.
Her maiden name was Lamson, and her only husband is given as Hickman.
I guess we are supposed to assume it was a stage name, but I refuse to suppose what I am supposed to suppose.
My supposition is that her first husband was named O’Neil, but he has since been scrubbed to keep us from connecting her to other O’Neils.
They may have even changed the spelling, to keep us from making the link to Eugene O’Neill.
Eugene Gladstone O’Neill (October 16, 1888 – November 27, 1953) was an American playwright.
Also,
and many others.
All those spellings are variations from the same surname.
But regardless of that, it is very strange to find this famous actress hanging out with Lizzie Borden.
Were they both famous actresses?
Even stranger is that they may have been lovers.
The gossip columns of the time had a field day with the “friendship” of Borden and O’Neil, and not just because of the notoriety of Borden.
Although pretty, O’Neil was a bit of a giant for the time.
We are told she was almost six feet tall, so she might easily have played the male role in the relationship.
Very few men were that tall at the time.
Lizzie wasn’t pretty, but she was rich, so she may have been just what Nance needed at the time.
OR there may be another explanation:
Lizzie and Nance were related.
See below.
The next clue is the doctor.
We are told Lizzie found her father’s body first.
She called for Bridget the maid, but didn’t allow Bridget to see the body.
She told Bridget to run for the doctor.
Conveniently, the doctor lived right across the street.
His name was Dr. Bowen.
What they don’t tell you is that this doctor was related to the Bordens.
Andrew Borden’s father was named Andrew Bowen Borden, and his mother was Martha Bowen.
So, the doctor was in on it.
He was probably Andrew’s nephew.
Bowen was involved in the autopsies.
Then we have the neighbor Adelaide Buffington Churchill, who gave testimony in court.
Turns out she was the daughter of the mayor of Fall River.
As the mayor, he would have been close with the richest banker in town.
Even more importantly, the Churchills were related to the Eddys.
Full text of “Genealogy of the Eddy family” (archive.org)
So were the Buffingtons.
See above, where I showed you that the Borden’s were descended from the Eddys.
Which means Adelaide Churchill was another relative.
She was also in on it.
Another “friend” and neighbor immediately called to the house was Alice Russell.
However, once again, the Russells were related to the Bordens.
See Peace Borden, who married her cousin, both from Fall River, MA.
Peace Borden (1736–Deceased) • FamilySearch
Her parents were Joseph Borden and Abigail Russell.
On the same page, we find a second joining of the families.
George Borden married Rebecca Cornell, whose mother was Mary Russell.
These folks were from Bristol, MA.
And a third time:
Rebecca Borden married Caleb Russell, both of Massachusetts.
All three marriages were prior to the Lizzie Borden murders.
Then we have the fact that both victims had been hit in the head so many times with the ax they could not be identified.
Convenient, right?
There are photos of the crime scene, but since they show nothing, I don’t need to bother you with them.
All we can see of the stepmother is the bottom of her shoes.
There were 19 blows to her head, sort of like the 19 hijackers of 9/11 and the 19 guerillas that Castro led into the mountains, etc.
Also, a signal is that the Borden murders were in 1892.
The Salem Witch Trials were in 1692.
Speaking of numerology, we are told that just before the murders, Lizzie told Bridget there was a sale of dress material at Sargent’s, at eight cents a yard.
Note the number.
“A call reached the Fall River police station at 11:15.”
Add ’em up:
you get eight again.
How old was maid Bridget Sullivan?
26.
Add ’em up.
The autopsies were performed on August 11.
Eights and ones.
Aces and eights, dead man’s hand.
“That day marked the annual picnic of the Fall River police department and most of them were off enjoying an outing at Rocky Point.”
Really?
What an amazing coincidence.
Sort of like all the fighter jets on the East Coast were on vacation on 9/11?
Sort of like all the Presidental guards were on vacation when Lincoln went to Ford’s theater, with even the local policeman on vacation next door, having a drink at the pub?
Because the police were all picnicking, no one was in control of the crime scene on the first day.
All the neighbors came in and trampled everything, “destroying all clues”.
That’s convenient.
Lizzie Borden House – Wikipedia
That reminds us of the story at the house of Sharon Tate.
The county medical examiner just happened to walk past the house and was pressed into service by Dr. Bowen.
Right.
This examiner was named William Andrew Dolan, and he is the other man who performed the autopsy.
At this link, we find he was appointed medical examiner by Governor Russell.
That’s interesting, eh?
The Governor of Massachusetts at the time was a Russell.
See above.
The Bordens were related to the Russells.
Dolan was an Elk and a Knight of Columbus, which means he was basically a Mason.
Decoding Rosicrucianism & Freemasonry Using the Unified Field – Library of Rickandria
His wife was Nellie B. Hussey.
Curiously, in the same period, a Nellie Hussey married a Thomas O’Neil.
Nellie Hussey and Thomas O’Neil – Marriage Records | Ancestry®
Remember, Nance O’Neil was the actress friend of Lizzie.
So, they may have been related.
But there’s more on Dr. Dolan.
With more digging, we find a John Hussey married a Sarah Buffington in 1863 in Fall River, MA.
See Adelaide Buffington Churchill above, neighbor of the Bordens who testified in court.
We found that she was related to the Bordens, so Dr. Dolan was also related to the Bordens through his wife.
He was in on it.
Next, Rufus Bartlett Hilliard, Police Chief of Fall River.
That’s a pretty fancy name for a police chief.
His wife was Nellie Smith Clark.
He was a Mason.
Communism & Masonry: Two Fronts of the Jew World Order – Library of Rickandria
Can you see it coming?
If we check the board of directors of Sagamore Mill in Fall River in 1872, we find among others Joseph Borden and Jonathan Hilliard.
This same Hilliard was also on the board of directors of the Weetamoe Mill.
At this same link (p. 15), we find that this John Borden, uncle of Andrew, had brothers named:
- Isaac
- Asa
- Levi
More indication the Bordens were crypto-Jews.
Not only that, but they were also working with Oliver Chace (family later Chase), originator of the Troy Mill.
His brother Harvey Chace was proprietor of Albion Mill in Rhode Island.
If we search on the surname Hilliard, we find a John Northern Hilliard in these decades promoting magic.
He worked as a reporter at the time of the Borden murders, but he was covering the surrender of Sitting Bull.
In 1896, he was drama critic for a Rochester newspapers, and it is claimed he was the last one to see the magician Herrmann the Great alive before his death on a train.
Alexander Herrmann (February 10, 1844 – December 17, 1896), better known as Herrmann the Great, was a 19th-century French magician. His wife, Adelaide Herrmann, was famously known as the “Queen of Magic.”
Yes, Herrmann was Jewish, and yes, he faked his death.
Hilliard later wrote several books on magic.
Finally, there is Charles S. Sawyer, who did door duty at the house on the day of the murders instead of a police officer.
Who was Charles Sawyer?
We are told he was a sign painter.
That is doubtful, since a few years later we find him as the treasurer of the Granite State Mining Company.
Full text of “Fall River, Massachusetts, city directory” (archive.org)
He was also the proprietor of Charles S. Sawyer and Co.
Sign painters don’t normally incorporate.
He was also a Master Mason in at least two lodges.
Well, this one is also easy, since alleged victim Abby Borden’s mother was named Sarah Sawyer.
So, Charles Sawyer was another plant from the family.
Sarah’s aunt was Sarah Sherman, wife of Samuel Sherman, so we have the link to that family as well.
See General Sherman in the Civil War.
You will tell me the General was from Ohio, but his family was from Connecticut before that.
The Shermans were also related to the Tripps.
Ebenezer Sherman (1701-1791) | WikiTree FREE Family Tree
Since the Bordens were related to the Tripps, we find a second link between the Sawyer and Borden families.
OK, back to the investigation.
Police admitted in trial they did only a cursory search of Lizzie’s room,
“because she was not feeling well.”
Right.
Her person was not even checked for blood stains.
Right.
These Keystone Cops found five axes and hatchets in the basement, but did not confiscate any of them.
They left them there!
Brilliant.
I guess they were hoping Lizzie would go berserk again and kill more witnesses, saving them from having to have a trial.
Two days later, the police finally searched the house and confiscated one of the axe heads.
I guess someone prompted them to at least make a show of it.
Then we get the ridiculous story of Lizzie burning a dress,
“because it had paint on it.”
This story is an obvious plant to make her look guilty and confirm the deaths, because it makes no sense.
We are told they were never able to determine whether that was the dress she had been wearing the day of the murders.
But how hard would that be?
All the prosecutor would have to do is demand Lizzie produce the dress.
She had been seen by dozens of people that day.
Since the bodies were photographed by the police (supposedly), there should have also existed a photo of Lizzie that day.
If Lizzie were not able to produce the dress, the jury would assume she had burned it.
But none of that came up in trial.
The inquest was later ruled inadmissible evidence in court, a very strange finding that all but proves the judge was also bought.
So, let’s look at the judges and lawyers.
Lizzie was defended by ex-Governor George Robinson.
George Dexter Robinson (born George Washington Robinson; January 20, 1834 – February 22, 1896) was an American lawyer and Republican politician from Chicopee, Massachusetts. After serving in the Massachusetts General Court and United States House of Representatives, Robinson served three one-year terms as Governor of Massachusetts, notably defeating Benjamin Franklin Butler in the 1883 election. After leaving office, his most famous legal client was Lizzie Borden, notoriously accused of killing her father and stepmother. She was acquitted in a highly sensationalized trial.
We have already seen the current Governor Russell was a relative of the Bordens.
What about Robinson?
His grandmother was Ruhamah Whitney.
Note the surname.
He was also descended from the Tarbells.
And we quickly find a Henry Robinson Borden born in Fall River in 1879, indicating a link between the families.
Henry Robinson Borden (1880-1907) | WikiTree FREE Family Tree
He was the father of actress Olive Borden, so we have more actresses coming up.
Olive Mary Borden (July 14, 1907 – October 1, 1947) was an American film and stage actress who began her career during the silent film era. She was nicknamed “the Joy Girl”, after playing the lead in the 1927 film of that same title. Borden was known for her jet-black hair and stunning overall beauty. At the peak of her career in the mid-1920s, Borden was earning $1,500 a week. In 1927, she walked out on her contract with Fox after refusing to take a pay cut. By 1929, her career began to wane due to her rumored reputation for being temperamental and her difficulty transitioning to sound films. She made her last film, Chloe, Love Is Calling You, in 1934 and moved on to stage work for a time. By the late 1930s, she had declared bankruptcy and stopped acting. During World War II, she joined the Women’s Army Corps. She was later honorably discharged with distinction after sustaining a foot injury during service. Borden attempted a comeback in films, however, she was hindered by her alcoholism and health problems. In 1945, she began working at the Sunshine Mission, a home for impoverished women located in the skidrow section of Los Angeles. She died there in October 1947 of a stomach ailment and pneumonia at the age of 40.
Henry probably got his middle name from his mother, who is given as Elizabeth R. Hood.
I suspect the R. stands for Robinson.
But her genealogy is completely scrubbed.
More research confirms my guess, however.
She was born Elizabeth Robinson Hood in 1854 in Bristol, MA.
This confirms it was a family name, which confirms a link between the Robinson and Bordens, despite all the scrubbing.
One of the prosecutors was future US Supreme Court Justice William Moody.
William Henry Moody (December 23, 1853 – July 2, 1917) was an American politician and jurist who held positions in all three branches of the Government of the United States. He represented parts of Essex County, Massachusetts in the United States House of Representatives from 1895 until 1902. He then served in the cabinet of President Theodore Roosevelt as Secretary of the Navy and Attorney General before Roosevelt appointed him to the United States Supreme Court in 1906. He retired from the Court for health reasons after a brief tenure of just less than four years. A progressive like Roosevelt, he opposed racial segregation and spoke out in favor of African-American civil rights.
This is also curious.
He would be US Attorney General and Secretary of the Navy as well.
His mother was Melissa Emerson, probably related to the famous Emersons.
She came from Essex County.
Moody’s aunt was Hannah Sawyer Moody, indicating the Moodys were related to the Sawyers.
William Moody Individual Records – Ancestry®
Remember, Abby Borden was a Sawyer.
But there is more.
Hannah Sawyer Moody married George Osborne.
Hannah Sawyer Moody Osborne (1823-1899) – Find a Grave Memorial
George’s sister was Catherine Robinson.
She married Edwin Robinson and was the mother of Herbert F. Robinson.
So, this prosecutor was also related to the Bordens.
The Bordens had relatives on both sides of the courtroom.
The prosecutor was related to the defense attorney.
The lead prosecutor was Hosea M. Knowlton.
Hosea Morrill Knowlton (May 20, 1847 – December 19, 1902) was a lawyer, District Attorney, and Attorney General of Massachusetts.
His uncle was Silas Hussy.
Remember above, where we found that the coroner William Dolan was married to Nellie Hussey.
If we check the page for Silas Hussy at Geni.com, we find that only one of his seven children is listed as [private].
Silas Hussy (deceased) – Genealogy (geni.com)
I suggest that child is Nellie Hussey.
Another aunt of Knowlton was Elizabeth Bartlett.
Her husband is curiously scrubbed, indicating we are again on the right track.
Remember the police chief, Rufus Bartlett Hilliard?
Three judges presided, Justices:
- Albert Mason
- Caleb Blodget
- Justin Dewey
Can’t you just smell it?
The Masons were related to the Thurbers, the Palmers, the Clarks, the Kimballs and the Fullers.
They were also related to the Shermans.
Capt Aaron Kimball (1729 – 1823) – Genealogy (geni.com)
They were also related to the Robinsons in Massachusetts.
Sarah Mason (Robinson) (1688 – 1754) – Genealogy (geni.com)
Also related to the Deweys, as you see on an adjoining page.
Abigail Dewey (Robinson) (1737 – 1817) – Genealogy (geni.com)
The Robinson link ties them to the accused.
The Dewey link means two of the judges were related, both to one another and to the accused.
When we find the Fuller surname in the lines of the Masons, we can then link them to the Putnams and thereby to the Salem Witch Trial.
The Putnams and Fullers were marrying back to the 17th century.
Remember, the Putnams were prominent players in Salem.
And the Fullers would produce Margaret Fuller, Buckminster Fuller, and many others.
But Judge Mason had an even closer link to the Bordens.
John Vinnicum Morse was staying with the Bordens at the time of the fake murders.
He was the brother of Lizzie’s real mother.
Well, his brother William Morse was married to Anna Frances Mason.
So, Anna Mason was Lizzie’s aunt by marriage.
And guess what, her parents are scrubbed.
They don’t want you to know how she was related to Judge Mason.
That leaves us with Judge Caleb Blodget.
His sister was Emily, and she married Miles Jackson.
Her son was George Jackson.
Do you remember the middle name of Andrew Borden?
Andrew Jackson Borden.
At the same link, we find that the previous year, 1891, Caleb Blodget had refused an appointment by Governor Russell to the Supreme Court of Massachusetts, due to declining health.
So, why was he still presiding in 1892?
Or was he?
I am showing you the entire event was faked, which means the trial was faked, which means the judges didn’t even have to be seated.
They were acting as spook judges, not real judges.
Also interesting to find that Caleb Blodget’s brother Isaac was Chief Justice of the New Hampshire Supreme Court at the time.
We find here that Anna Blodget married Thomas Sherman in Lexington, MA.
Full text of “Asahel Blodgett of Hudson and Dorchester, N. H.” (archive.org)
This ties Blodget to the other two judges.
In the same link we also find Hannah Blodget marrying Stephen Chase in 1776.
This ties Blodget to the other families once again.
For a third link, Rebecca Blodget had married John Russell, though that link was in around 1720 (a bit early to link strongly to our event).
But we can double that, since in 1726 Samuel Blodget married Mary Russell.
The Blodgets were also related to the Booths.
Abner Blodget married Hannah Booth in 1810 in East Windsor.
Of course, the Booths were also related to the Clarkes.
Asia Frigga Sydney Clarke (Booth) (1835 – 1888) – Genealogy (geni.com)
The Blodgets and Pierces married several times in the 19th century.
Blodgett – Pierce Family – Family Pages
This is interesting because Abby Borden’s grandmother Elizabeth Woodman was the daughter of Mary Pierce.
The Pierces were related to the whole clan above and are sprinkled liberally throughout.
They are closely tied to the Robinsons as well, and the Bushes later married into the Pierce/Robinson clan of New England.
But let us return to the fake trial.
More Proof the Trump Trials are Vaudeville – Library of Rickandria
In the published proceedings, we find policemen contradicting one another on simple facts like where the handle of the ax was found.
This is absurd and would never happen in a real trial.
The police would have drawn up a scenario and published it at the station.
Any officer called to testify would have been told to study the scenario or say,
“I don’t know.”
There had been a similar ax murder nearby, but neither the prosecution nor the defense used that fact to question the event.
They only checked to be sure the accused there had not been anywhere near Fall River.
But anyone with brain should have asked if the Fall River plot had been borrowed from the other event.
We have seen that this is done all the time in these fake events.
We saw it in the later Zodiac event, when Cheri Jo Bates was fake murdered in a plot borrowed from an “identical” event the year before.
The Zodiac Murders & others were Faked – Library of Rickandria
You would think the borrowing would make people suspicious, but it tends to do the reverse:
people see the similarities in the two events, and the first gives credence to the second.
Most people are not too savvy, about crime or anything else, so they never think to question the entire event.
They question only details, but never whether the event happened at all.
The fake judge ruled that prussic acid bought by Lizzie the day before could not be admitted as evidence because the event was too remote in time.
Really?
One day is remote in time?
This indicates that Lizzie’s acquittal was scripted.
She agreed to act a part, but that act didn’t include going to jail for even a minute.
Also, strictly against courtroom procedure was Judge Dewey’s strange summation to the jury, in which he practically instructed it to find for the defense.
The jury is supposed to be free to weigh evidence without being told how to weigh it by one of the judges.
Yes, the judges are there to give instruction to the jury, but not in an extended closing statement as if they are one the attorneys.
So, this event was the ultimate inside job.
We see more evidence of that when we find that Lizzie Borden remained in Fall River, even after supposedly murdering her parents with an ax.
She was rich and could have moved anywhere.
How could she be comfortable in Fall River after that?
She lived there until 1927, another 35 years.
And she didn’t live on the outskirts, she lived “on the Hill” in one of the biggest houses in town in the richest neighborhood.
But if the event was faked, all the locals knew that.
Half of them knew it immediately, because they were involved in it.
But even the other half—the half that been embezzled from at the bank—found out soon enough.
You will say,
“If they discovered the truth, why didn’t they sue or go to the papers?”
You aren’t keeping up.
We have seen that the courts and the papers were owned by the Bordens and their relatives.
After the rest of the world had been hoaxed, there was nothing that they could do.
We found the same thing in Salem, where Increase Mather saw he was beaten and tried to sweep the whole thing under the rug.
Any further publicity would have further damaged him, so it was all he could do to limit the fallout.
The same thing would have applied in Fall River, which was controlled by the same powerful families.
Those who discovered the hoax were shut down completely by the form of the event.
As we have seen, even the Governor of the State was in on it, and the Supreme Court, and the Supreme Court of neighboring New Hampshire, and likely the Feds as well.
President Benjamin Harrison was the ultimate lame duck in 1892.
Benjamin Harrison (August 20, 1833 – March 13, 1901) was an American politician who served as the 23rd president of the United States from 1889 to 1893. He was a member of the Harrison family of Virginia—a grandson of the ninth president, William Henry Harrison, and a great-grandson of Benjamin Harrison V, a Founding Father. A Union Army veteran and a Republican, he defeated incumbent Grover Cleveland to win the presidency.
Although he was the nominee for President, he wasn’t running due to the illness and death of his wife in that year.
When Grover Cleveland came in in 1893, he had better things to do than get involved in local hoaxes in Fall River, MA.
He had to deal with the stock market panic of 1893.
Panic of 1893 – Wikipedia
Which is our next clue.
The stock market panic started in February 1893.
The Borden hoax was late 1892, and Andrew Borden was a banker.
Global Banking System – Library of Rickandria
But no one ever makes the connection.
Power of the Purse: The Origin of Money – Library of Rickandria
The stock market panics are also manufactured:
they are also hoaxes, of a sort, since they aren’t the natural events they are sold as.
The major bankers know beforehand when the panics will be, since they are creating them.
The Black Monday Murders (2016-2018) – Library of Rickandria
In this way we see that Andrew Borden’s faked death may have served double duty:
1) it may have covered up local embezzlement or other impropriety
2) it allowed Borden to cash out before the panic, while avoiding claims of prior knowledge or insider trading.
LOR:
Or you can buy into what the mainstream media sells you:
Lizzie (2018 film) – Wikipedia
Lizzie Borden Biopic ‘Lizzie’: True Story Behind the Movie | TIME
The Legend of Lizzie Borden – Wikipedia
The Legend of Lizzie Borden (TV Movie 1975) – IMDb
SAUCE:
The Lizzie Borden Ax Murders Never Happened – Library of Rickandria