BORDEN JURY FOUND
Miss
Lizzie Sat Calmly Through It All
NEW BEDFORD, June
5-Before a stern and grim-looking bench of Judges as ever sat in
Puritan New England of old. Miss Lizzie Andrew Borden was put on trial
for her life the Court House in New Bedford. this morning. She had been
occupying the large and rather comfortable room of the matron in the
House of Correction. She was taken along the two short blocks to the
Court House In a closed carriage at about a quarter to 11 o'clock. A
little crowd had gathered to see her. It was a crowd mainly composed of
well-dressed women and young girls, a crowd that added picturesqueness
to the beautiful neighborhood of grand residences and park like
gardens. The prisoner hurried into the Court House, closely attended by
Deputy Sheriff Kirby, who is detailed as her escort. Those who saw Miss
Borden for the first time were very much astonished. Her newspaper
portraits have done her no justice at all. Some have made her out a
hard and hideous fright, and others have flattered her. She is, in
truth, a very plain-looking old maid. She may be likened to a typical
school marm, plain, practical, and with a face that shows the deep
lines of either care or habitual low spirits, and the transitory marks
of a recent illness.
Beside her
on her right sits bar custodian. She was dressed in black. excepting
for a blue plume of feathers, two blue velvet rosettes in her hat. and
a large enamelled pansy pin at her throat. Her dress was of black
brocade, with two rows of narrow velvet ribbon found her curls and
around the bottom of her basque, and three rows of the same ribbon
above the edge of her skirt.
A common
sense, broad-toed, brand new shoe peeped out from under her dress, and
she wore black cotton gloves. Her dress fitted her as perfectly as if
she had been measured for it in Paris, but it was of a very old
fashion. Having the: the front of the basque puffed with great
fullness. Excepting her rather loud Din pin she wore no jewelry. Her
black straw hat was poke shaped. and of no existing, fashion. Her
beautiful, fine nut-
brown hair, soft and glossy to a degree, was pulled back into a lone
roll behind her head.
And now the
difficult thing is to describe her face. Like her dress, it was that of
a lady. She has large, brown eyes, and a fine high forehead, but her
nose is a tilting one, and her cheek bones are so prominent that the
lower part of her countenance is greatly overweighed. Her head is
broadest at the ears. Her cheeks are very plump. and her jaws are
strong and conspicuous. Her thick. protruding lips are pallid from
sickness, and ber mouth is drawn down into two very deep creases that
denote either a melancholy or an irritable disposition. She is no
Medusa or Gorgon. There is nothing wicked, criminal. or hard in her
features. Her manner in public has often been described as if she was
callous or brazen. It was not so today.
She behaved like a self-possessed girl, with all the grit that comes of
American blood, which has flowed pure in her family during centuries.
She was modest, calm, and quiet, and it was plain to see that she had
complete mastery of herself, and could make her sensations and emotions
invisible to an impertinent public. The Massachusetts law makes a
prisoner very conspicuous and gives her a trying part to play.
The spick
and span little court room is divided into halves, the rear for the
public and the fore part for the actors in its legal dramas and
tragedies. This division is made by a rail. One yard in front of that
railing is a lighter rail, enclosing a space for the counsel. Between the two railings sits this wretched
prisoner. Next to her is THE SUN correspondent, and the correspondents
of the other New York papers sit all along on the same line.
The
fifty-year-old court house, like a toy building in its setting of
greenery and blossoms is neat and clean with the assertive cleanliness
of everything in New Bedford. Its one court room on the second floor is
also kept "shipshape and Bristol fashion," as the sailors would say.
Its drab-colored walls are framed with white wood work and fluted white
columns sustain its arched ceiling, and its ten windows look out upon
as much foliage as if it were in the woods.
Through
those embrasures comes the mingled perfume of wisteria and magnolia
blossoms. Occasionally, too, the lowing of a cow sounds louder in the
court room than the proceedings of the lawyers. A picture of a dead
District Attorney tries hard to relieve the severe plainness of the
room. The floor is all carpeted and yawning spittoons are set about.
When the
proceedings began this morning it was seen that the Judges, the
lawyers, the Sheriff, and most of the attendants were in the main a
white-haired, aged lot of citizens. On one
side of the room sat six rows of reporters, bending over their pads and
looking like a writing class in school. The
school-master was well impersonated by the High Sheriff, soldierly
looking Andrew Wright, who sat on the other side of the room in a box
by himself, and every not and again started everybody by rapping
sharply for order with a lead pencil.
The square headed,
Cagle-eyes Chief Justice than addressed the lawyers and the 150
talesmens of the Jury panel. These talesmen by the way, practically
made up the audience of the court room. This
was what the Chief Justice said should guide the talesmen in taking or
rejecting places on the jury: "It will
be the duty of the Court to put to each person summoned as a juror
questions as to whether he has formed or expressed any opinion in
relation to the cause or is sensible of any bias or prejudice. It is also the duty of the Court to ask each
juror, if he has any opinions which will prevent him from finding a
verdict of guilty in a cause where the crime is punishable by death. It has been said by Chief Justice Shaw, and it
has never been questioned as law, that, the statute intends to exclude
any person who has made up his mind, or formed a judgment in advance,
no matter in favor of which side. Still
the opinion or judgment must be something more than a vague impression
formed from casual conversation with others or from reading imperfect
and abbreviated newspaper reports. It must
be such an opinion upon the merits of the question as would be likely
to bias or prevent a candidate's judgment upon a full hearing of the
testimony. I desire to call the attention
of all those persons who are summoned as jurors to this statement in
reference to the opinions to which the statute refers, and I also wish
to answer these questions under oath, that he must answer them truly,
and accept what may follow. Also with
reference to the question as to whether opinions which would preclude
one from finding defendant guilty of an offence punishable by death. It is not all what opinions are entertained
with reference to capital punishment, but there are some persons so
constituted mentally that they could not sustain a law of the land
which they deemed wrong. There are some
persons so mentally constituted that they could not declare the
simplest axiom of mathematics if it were to follow that death was
inflicted in consequence of the declaration. If
any person thinks and is satisfied that he is so mentally constructed
that he cannot find upon evidence that the defendant is guilty of an
offense punishable with death, then in response to that question he
will so answer. But in answering that question as the others each juror
will keep in mind that he answering upon oath."
The Chief
Justice was narrowly watched and listened to while he delivered this
address, for a great many persons were making his acquaintance. They noted that he spoke carefully, firmly,
and distinctly, enunciations each syllable separately, and rolling his
r's a little. Nothing was more apparent
than the kindliness of his tones.
It was
evident that grim as he looks Miss Borden will find him all the
sympathy and gentleness that is compatible with justice.
The old
clerk. Simeon Borden called his namesake the prisoner to the bar. He is
as neat and sleek as a typical Sunday School Superintendent. This was
how he prepared the first cruel ordeal for the imprisoned woman.
"Lizzie Andrew Borden," said he, "You will now step to the bar to be
tried by twelve good men of the common-wealth. If you object to any you
have the right to do so as they are called. You -have the right to
challenge twenty-two of them and as many more as you can show good
cause for.
At the
calling of her name. the pallid. pink-lipped old maid reached the
railing in front of her, and thus helped- herself to her feet with very
visible effort. In that way she got up most of the many times that she
had to stand.
She
listened to what the clerk had to say, and when he had finished she
bowed very slightly and sat down. Then with a break for dinner the
examination of the jurors went on until 101 of them had been called and
yet it was an astongishingly rapid progress that was made, for instead
of its taking a week to get jury the twelve good men and true filled
their box in the first day.
In
Massachusetts the Chief Justice puts all the questions, and these are
the ones he put over and over again a hundred
times to-day: Are you related to the prisoner at the bar or to Andrew
J. Borden or Abbie D. Borden, deceased?" .. Have you any prejudice in
this cause: have you formed an opinion with relation to it?" Have you
any prejudice or bias in it?" "Such opinions as you have formed or
expressed. would they prevent your giving a candid judgment upon a full
hearing of the evidence?" "Have you any opinion that will preclude you
from finding the defendant guilty of an offence punishable with death?"
Now and
then one side or the other would ask Mr. Justice Mason to add this
question: Are you at present a client of counsel on either side in this
case?" If all the questions were answered satisfactorily the Chief
Justice then pronounced these words: " The
juror stands indifferent." At that each little knot of lawyers would
get its heads together and a mighty whispering would ensue. If Mr.
Knowlton did not want the man he said:
"The Commonwealth challenges!" If Mr. Jennings did not want the man he
had to tell Miss Borden to say so .At firs he walked over to where she
sat and whispered to her, but that got tedious, because he objected to
sixteen men in all. So, after a little
time, he only walked half way to her, and made believe say the word
"challenge" with his lips. Even that got tiresome, and after a little
more time he merely wriggled round in his seat and made a little mouth
at Miss Borden, as if he and she were school girls holding a pantomimic
conversation.
At first it
seemed that she was to challenge all Irishmen and Catholics, on account
of Bridget Sullivan's connection with the case, and certainly the first
few of that description that came along were challenged by the defence.
But on the other hand one who was said to be Irish and a Catholic WAS
chosen. Then, again, it seemed at first as thought only men at or
beyond the middle age were satisfactory, but this same Irishman was
also exceptional in being young. Only
three or four foreign names were called. The
rest were all Wilburs, Palmers and Folgers, that sort of Americans
carrying such given names as Reuben and Eben and Gideon and Ezra and
Elihu. The reason the jury filled up so
quickly was that everybody seemed to want to get on it.
District
Attorney Knowlton is a veritable Cromwell. a round-headed powerful and
bustling big man. built like a bull. with a thick neck. Bristling hair,
a red beard heavy jaws and plump cheeks. His Assistant District
Attorney. Moody of Essex county is the youngest and handsomest of the
lawyers. He is a blue-eyed blond not much above 30, dressed like a New
Yorker. and with a quick intelligent face. He is as bright and alert as
he is handsome.
These two
lawyers for the commonwealth sat at a table in front of Miss Borden and
also in front of the jury box almost. Close to the clerk's desk before
the bench, was the table for the three lawyers for the defence. Of
these the Hon. George D. Robinson. three times Governor of Massachusetts, is easily the most impressive and
distinguished looking: indeed, he is the most notable man in the
courtroom. He is of an old-fashioned type,
such as Daniel Webster was familiar with. He is tall and stately, with
a fine head and an intelligent face. His
build shows that he loves the good things of life, and his face shows
that he thinks and works hard. His hair is
still black but very thin, and he combs it so as to make it cover as
much baldness as possible. Mr. Melvin O.
Adams, famous in Boston as an eloquent pleader, is typical of a large
class of the young men of the Hub. He
evidently pays attention to his looks, and they are worth it. He has the generous full mouth of an orator
and the strong nose that usually goes with it. He
has great, handsome brown eyes, and the part that is exactly in the
middle of his hair, terminates in two pretty little curls.
Yet he is a very masculine and forceful looking man.
But the
most interesting of its group is its leader, Mr. Andrew J. Jennings,
who serves Miss Borden as a friend as well as a lawyer.
He is very much such a man as Col. Lamont, the Secretary of War. He is a miniature of Lamont.
He has the same round head, the same aggressive moustache, the
same quick eyes and nervous manner, and the same ability to be
everywhere and see everything at once. His
eyes got more energy than all the rest of the people in the court room
except the reporters.
The court
room is so small, and the population so large, that a free ticket to
the trial and beard and pay besides, was a thing to be looked after. The lawyers had their pick of the county till
about the eleventh man was reached, and then everybody seemed to dread
being the twelfth, who, in case of a the worst, would have to be the
final person to say the awful word "Guilty."
The jury
when it was chosen was formed of the following men: George Potter of
Westport, William F. Dean of Taunton, John Wilbur of Somerset, Fred C.
Wilbur of Raynham, Lemuel K. Wilbur of Easton, William Wescott of
Seeconk, A. B. Hodge of Taunton, Augustus Swift of New Bedford, Frank
G. Cole of Attleboro, John C. Finn of Taunton, and Allen H. Wordell of
Dartmouth. They are very solid lot of
citizens.
Richards,
the foreman, is a rich land owner; Swift is the manager of iron works,
and the rest are farmers and master mechanics and such like. To get a dozen of them 101 were called. Fifty-two were excused for scruples or
prejudices, sixteen were challenged by Miss Border, and fourteen by the
Commonwealth.
After the
jury was formed it went off into a little room by itself, and the
members sent telegrams to their families saying that they were shut up
and might not get home for a month. In the
mean time the Judges were inquiring into their characters and
determining which one should be foreman. The
wealthy Richards was chosen, and the court adjourned.
After this
proceedings will begin at 9 o'clock in the morning and last till 5 in
the evening. Tomorrow morning Miss Borden
will be called upon to stand up and hear the reading of the indictment
charging her with the commission of a double crime such as only a fiend
could conceive and a monster execute.
After that
the talking of the spokesman for each side will open this the greatest
of all criminal cases in the history of New England.
Then the taking of testimony will begin, probably with that of
Dr. Dolan, whom we would call the Coroner, but who is called here the
Medical Examiner of Fall River.
He was in
the court room this afternoon. So was
Congressman Randall of this district and ex-Judge Bennett, the dean of
the Boston University Law School. Three
particular friends of Miss Borden sat not far from her beyond the high
rail behind which she sat.
They were
her former pastor, the Rev. Mr. Jubb of Central Congregational Church
of Fall River; City Missionary Buck of that town, and the President of
the Five Cents' Savings Bank in the same place. All
three were permitted to talk with her very freely without any
supervision after the selection of the jury.
But that
isn't half as amazing as the fact the streets of New Bedford alone, or
in any company she pleases, whenever she likes. It
seems that after the preliminary examination three months ago, when she
was to be sent to the House of Detention, Marshal Hilliard and State
Detective Seaver went her bail, and got her a job as servant in the
House of Correction. Bridget was the grand lady of the Borden
household, and she has been in luck ever since the tragedy. It must be remembered that she is the only one
who is known to have been in the house at the time of the murder, and
that some of the theories made her a conspirator or an accomplice. Yet she goes about telling her story to the
servant girls of New Bedford before the court or the public is allowed
to her it.
Miss Emma,
the elder sister called upon the prisoner today and spent some time
afterward in one of the rooms under the court room.
The prisoner had a sort of semi-visit from another member of the
family in a very peculiar war.
The
seventieth or eightieth talesman stood up to be examined, and was asked
the first question, "Are you related to the prisoner at the bar?" "I am," said the man, to the astonishment of
everybody, including eh prisoner. "Then
you are excused," said the Chief Justice.
Miss Lizzie
Borden leaned over to Deputy Sheriff Kirby and said: "Who on earth is
he?"
Mr. Kirby
told her he was Mr. Oliver E. Gifford, and her uncle by marriage. Miss Lizzie put up her fan in front of her
face and laughed quite heartily. Gifford
saw her action and he, too, laughed as he sought his seat.
After the
noon recess tomorrow, and probably before any evidence is taken the
jury and the lawyers will go to Fall Rive, and make a thorough
examination of the scene of the murder-the Borden house and its
surroundings. In that way they will spend the whole afternoon, so that
the probability is that the only court proceedings will be the reading
of the indictment and the opening addresses of the counsel.