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Full Title: "The all River Tragedy. A History of the Borden
Murders"Description: "The Making of the Modern Law: Trials,
1600-1926" collection provides descriptions of the major trials
from over 300 years, with official trial documents, unofficially
published accounts of the trials, briefs and arguments and more.
Readers can delve into sensational trials as well as those
precedent-setting trials associated with key constitutional and
historical issues and discover, including the Amistad Slavery case,
the Dred Scott case and Scopes "monkey" trial."Trials" provides
unfiltered narrative into the lives of the trial participants as
well as everyday people, providing an unparalleled source for the
historical study of sex, gender, class, marriage and
divorce.++++The below data was compiled from various identification
fields in the bibliographic record of this title. This data is
provided as an additional tool in helping to insure edition
identification: ++++MonographHarvard Law School LibraryFall River,
Press of J. D. Munroe. 1893
Lizzie Borden Took an Axe... When the assassination of Andrew J.
Borden and Abbie D Borden, his wife, was announced, not only the
people of Fall Rive: and of Massachusetts, but the public
throughout the country manifested the deepest interest in the
affair. The murders soon became the theme of universal comment,
both in public and private and every newspaper reference to the
affair was read with eagerness digested and commented upon in a
manner unprecedented. The crimes stand out in bold relief as the
most atrocious, and at the same time, the most mystifying which the
American public had ever before been called upon to discuss. They
had about them that fascination of uncertainty, horrible though
they were, which fixes the attention and holds it continually. Miss
Lizzie A. Borden, a daughter of the murdered man, was arrested and
charged with the killing. She was a young woman of hitherto
spotless reputation and character, and more than that she was
educated, refined and prominently connected with the work of the
Christian church in Fall River. Her arrest added more and more to
the interest which the public had taken in the matter. She was
tried before the Superior Court of Massachusetts and a jury of her
peers and found not guilty of the crimes. This event settled beyond
question the probability of her guilt, and yet the case lost none
of its absorbing interest. The author of this book therefore, has
for a purpose the desire to give the reading public a connected
story of the whole case, commencing with the day of the tragedy and
ending with the day that Miss Borden was set free. Persons
believing implicitly in the correctness of the findings of the jury
at New Bedford will see much wrong done in those chapters which
treat of the police work. But that the grand jury indicted the
young lady is no fault of the author, and the story of what brought
that indictment about is important, therefore it is given without
prejudice. Harsh words were said of Miss Borden, but they came from
those who had a sworn duty to perform, and they alone are
responsible. Her defense is given as freely as the case of the
prosecution, and with it the history is made as complete as was
possible. The facts discussed came from official sources and are
dependent upon the testimony submitted at the court trials. Watch
for: Assassination of Lincoln From all this it appears that the
time has come when a clear, concise history of this conspiracy and
trial should be given to the world. To this task the writer has
addressed himself, and he offers this volume as the result of his
labors. The facts herein narrated in regard to the assassination,
as well as to the parts enacted by each of the individual members
of the conspiracy, are drawn from the testimony before the
Commission. They have been thrown into the form of a connected
narrative, and there has been nothing stated as a fact but what is
fully sustained by the evidence which formed the basis of the
decisions of the Commission. Nothing has been admitted into this
narrative but what rests on the specific testimony of unimpeachable
witnesses. The author only deems it necessary that the opinion, or
belief, of Father Walter, and all others of his persuasion, shall
be confronted by the testimony in the case, in order that an
intelligent judgment shall be reached. At the time of this trial
there were just two classes of people in this country - the friends
and the enemies of the government. The former were united and
determined in their purpose and effort to preserve and perpetuate
the government established by our fathers under the constitution
that included in its purpose and provisions the union of the states
and made us a nation. The latter were madly bent on its overthrow,
and so judged favorably or unfavorably of the occurrences of the
times, as they tended to favor or hinder the accomplishment of
their purposes.
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