I think it's probably been overlooked - at least I've never myself seen it anywhere reproduced.
"Blood Stained Hatchet Found"
http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/ ... d-1/seq-9/
It was published in the Wichita Daily Eagle on June 17th 1903. As you know, such pieces of copy would appear simultaneously in many different titles throughout the States. This one is strange because I've not yet found it in any other newspaper. I can't yet find any follow-up, either. The date calls it into doubt - surely it was fabricated for the anniversary of Lizzie Borden's acquittal. And yet...
Mrs Milland is said to have discovered the hatchet a year and three months ago - in other words long before the anniversary. I've lost count of how many hatchet-finds there were but to give her her due, Mrs Milland's may only be the second.
All the people named can be found in the Census (which is unusual for newspaper articles of the day) and what's more, they live exactly where the account places them, close to the Bordens' house. John Carey, originally from England, is the tailor at the centre of it. Carey, his wife, and other family members ran a tailoring and dressmaking business with premises on South Main Street which fit perfectly with the locus of this abandoned 'murder weapon':
https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:M95L-G1X
It was Carey who'd employed one Thomas P. Walker, and we are already familiar with Walker's small rôle in the case back in 1892. Walker owed Mrs Borden unpaid rent, the Bordens took action against him, so the police for a while regarded Walker with suspicion. Officers Doherty and Harrington investigated Walker but became satisfied Walker was at work at the time of the murders. Could they have been wrong? This is from the Witness Statements, Phillip Harrington, page 13:
'Thos. Walker, a tailor employed by John Carey, lived in a tenement of Mrs. Borden's on Fourth Street. He was ordered out, and R. S. Reed's store took his furniture. He worked all day Thursday, so says Mr. Carey. Walker said he had no feeling against Mr. Borden. What trouble he had was caused by himself. He said he went on a drunk, and could not pay his bills, so he had to vacate the tenement and return the furniture, which was purchased on the installment plan.'
As you can see, in this account of animosity between tenant and Borden landlord, Abby Borden is involved. Then Abby's half-sister Bertha Sarah Whitehead says she's scared of Walker's wife - or denies she said it. This is from The Fall River Globe of August 11 1892:
'MARSHAL HILLIARD - Tells the Reporters of the Clues He Has Exploded.
'...This morning I received a note from Mrs Whitehead of 11 Division Street, in which she made reference to what Mrs. Walker had been reported as having said to her. The note read: "I emphatically deny that I ever said that I was afraid of Mrs. Walker"'.
Here's the man I take to be Thomas Walker, in 1900 still living - with that redoubtable wife - on Fourth Street:
https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:M952-H44
So what do you think of this hatchet? Did it exist? And if so, could the murderer have escaped down that alley opposite the Borden house? Could Walker have been the killer? It was only Carey's word which gave him his alibi.
Walker and Carey were fellow Englishmen
