irina wrote:Thanks so much, Twins! ...
You're welcome, Irina.
irina wrote:... To me such a brutal murder of Abby is almost like a self defence, self preservation action. Not like Abby attacked, but in the case of Lizzie as killer, that Lizzie felt she had to kill Abby in order to survive.
I have no idea how much Andrew could have favored Abby in a will to the exclusion of his biological children. Since I have married two businessmen I feel I have a little insight into how their minds work. I would think Andrew wanted to provide the best he could for a faithful, thrifty wife of many years AND keep the wealth within his biological family~Lizzie and Emma. A logical way to do this would be to initially bequeath to the daughters a certain amount of money. I have read the sum of $25,000 each somewhere. I could see him leaving the rest of the estate in some sort of trust that would continue to generate wealth. Possibly Abby would have been in charge or perhaps she would have been like a board member along with Lizzie and Emma. Upon Abby's death there would be a provision for the rest of the estate to go to the daughters or to continue to be managed by whatever fiduciaries.
If Lizzie did it because of inheritance I would think the motive could have been not to end up tied to and perhaps subservient to Abby for the rest of Abby's life. Rather than murdering for instant wealth, in this scenario I could see murder to avoid being tied to Abby forever. Perhaps Abby made an off hand comment about how she would handle the estate and it enraged Lizzie. Maybe there was a mild threat implied, like Lizzie needed to do something or change her ways. Maybe there was a comment that Andrew didn't trust his daughters to handle wealth. THESE things I can see setting off a murderous rage.
I believe there was a lot more going on in the Borden household than we will ever know about. I think the all mighty dollar was the primary motive, but I also strongly feel that it was NOT the ONLY motive. I am a 'Lizzie did it' believer, and have always felt that there was something that took place between Abby and Lizzie on the morning of the 4th; simply due to the number of blows she received vs. the number of blows Andrew received. Granted the killer had more time to hack away at Abby. If an intruder were the killer, they would not have known if someone would come in during their vicious attack on Abby, but if Lizzie were the killer, then she knew exactly where everyone was during the time that Abby was killed
We don't know what the conversation was between John and Andrew on the evening of the 3rd, but Abby did. These two men may very well have been talking about a will naming Abby as primary beneficiary, a transfer of land in Abby’s name, or something on that order. We don't know how much of Andrew and John's conversation was overheard by Lizzie, who would have been able to clearly hear their conversation from the upstairs front hall landing, without being noticed. As far as I know, the timeline for the evening of the 3rd is approximately: 8:45 pm Morse returns from Swansea, talks in sitting room with Andrew and Abby. 9:00 pm Lizzie returns from Alice Russell’s house, enters and locks the front door and goes immediately up to her room without speaking to her father or uncle. 9:15 pm Abby Borden retires to bed. 10:00 pm Andrew and Morse retire to bed. If this time line is somewhat correct, then Lizzie could have eavesdropped in on approximately an hour of the conversation between John and Andrew.
In the thread titled, Dr. Bowen, I posted some information from Shelley who was at one time a tour guide at 92 Second Street. She has conducted several reenactments to determine the timelines of events, such as how much time it would have taken Bridget to go to Dr. Bowen’s house, and then to Alice Russell’s house, as well as things such as the following…
On Wed Oct 31, 2007, Shelley posted:
If all the window are open, you cannot hear a conversation in the sitting room from Lizzie's room unless the speakers stand right in the sitting room window and speak loudly. You have to go out on the front hall upstairs landing to hear a conversation in the sitting room- of course that would also have been very easy for Lizzie to have done Wednesday night when she came home from Alice's.
What I have found more interesting is the fact that Lizzie moved her headboard right into that corner by the door between her room and Abby's room. Her pillow lines up exactly with the KEYHOLE into the older Borden's bedroom and yes, every single word anyone says in that room can be heard clear as a bell. Andy's safe was also right in that room behind Lizzie pillow. I never thought it was a coincidence she moved that bed as soon as she got back from Europe and crammed it right in that corner. Sure, it kept Abby or anyone else from ever being able to come through that door, but it also gave her the best spot in the house to eavesdrop.
Source:
viewtopic.php?f=1&t=3183&p=53714
I agree with you. All of the things you listed as possible remarks made by Abby, would definitely have sent Lizzie into a blind killing rage.