Wednesday, 9 September 2020

Legend of Lizzie Borden (and Maybe a Ghost) Lives On in Victorian House for Sale

realtor.com

Is it too soon in the season for a ghost story? The Victorian home in a small town in Massachusetts where the infamous Lizzie Borden lived after her time in jail until her death can be yours for $890,000.

The legend of Lizzie Borden has gripped the town of Fall River since the gruesome ax murders of Borden’s father and stepmother in the house where they lived on Aug. 4, 1892.

Borden was accused of the murders, tried, and acquitted. She died of pneumonia in 1927 at the age of 66.

“This was not the house where the murders were committed,” says listing agent Suzanne St. John, explaining that Borden inhabited the home on French Street known as Maplecroft until her death. It may also be the home of some spooky inhabitants.

Exterior

Josh Chopy

Porch

Josh Chopy

Borden lived in Maplecroft with her sister Emma from 1893 until the two had a fight in 1905, and they never saw each other again.

The home where the murders took place is on Second Street. It is now the Lizzie Borden Bed & Breakfast, a top tourist attraction in the town.

“Lizzie just has a lot of fans, a lot of curious people. The legend of Lizzie Borden just brings thousands of visitors to the area from all over the world,” says St. John, who is also a tour guide at the B&B.

Entrance

John Chopy

Parlor

John Chopy

The current owner bought this property, which sits on a half-acre lot, in 2018 for $600,000. His aim was to turn it into a B&B, like the “murder house” that he also owns. But since it had never been used commercially, storms, permitting issues, and the COVID-19 slowdown intervened. The owner instead decided to sell it.

Maplecroft was built in 1887 and has seven bedrooms and 3.5 bathrooms. It measures nearly 4,000 square feet. It was restored by the previous owner.

Dining room

John Chopy

Interior

John Chopy

“The house is like stepping back in time but with modern amenities,” St. John says. “It’s three floors and restored in high Victorian style. The fireplaces are very ornate and original. Some of the wallpaper has been uncovered and is original, dating back to Lizzie and Emma.”

Kitchen

John Chopy

The sale price includes all of the furnishings, which are period pieces. The kitchen has antique-looking appliances, but everything works.

Some of floors are parquet, and some ceilings are tin. A few of the house’s six fireplaces are carved—and Borden legend says the carvings have hidden meanings. St. John is not one of those believers.

“We don’t actually even know if it was Lizzie who put in the mantelpieces or if they were ordered from Sears, Roebuck or something,” she says. “They have these sayings, and I have read the sayings and I don’t think they actually have a hidden meaning. They are poems that are engraved into the mantelpieces.”

Bedroom

John Chopy

Bathroom

John Chopy

The property also includes a three-car garage, sunroom, and wraparound porch.

Sunroom

John Chopy

The house is located in the historic Highlands District of the city. The listing agent notes that growing up, the Borden sisters had always wanted to move there.

“It was always their goal, even when they were living at the house on Second Street. The goal was to always get up to the Highlands because that’s where society lived, not downtown,” St. John explains.

Even though the girls’ father had money, he was very frugal, depriving his family of gas lighting and indoor plumbing, which were common at the time. His daughters were embarrassed.

“So after the murders occurred and they got their inheritance, boom, that’s where they moved,” St. John says, adding that Lizzie never went back to the house on Second Street. From jail, she went to friends’ houses and then to Maplecroft.

Bedroom with period displays.

John Chopy

And the next owner may have some uninvited guests in the home. The house is rumored to be haunted, and while it’s unclear where Lizzie died, her wake was held in the parlor.

“It seems like it’s Lizzie, and possibly Emma and somebody that keeps coming through as saying that he’s Lizzie’s boyfriend,” St. John says. Many ghost-hunting TV shows have featured the home, and other ghost hunters have visited.

For the most part, however, the paranormal incidents seem to be friendly.

“Some people have said that they have been pushed. I got poked in the eye,” St. John says, adding that her experience with poking was at the house where the murders took place, not at the house for sale.

St. John says there is a bit of responsibility that comes with buying this house.

“I would hope that [the new owners] would respect the historical aspect of it and want to keep the integrity of the history of that house,” she says. “It’s still always going to be Maplecroft; it says that right across the front steps in the granite. It’s always going to have people driving by. It’s always going to have people walking by and wondering and whispering about Lizzie Borden.”

No matter what you believe, in this home, her story lives on.

The post Legend of Lizzie Borden (and Maybe a Ghost) Lives On in Victorian House for Sale appeared first on Real Estate News & Insights | realtor.com®.



source https://www.realtor.com/news/unique-homes/legend-of-lizzie-borden-and-maybe-a-ghost-lives-on-in-victorian-house-for-sale/

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