From WestplexToday.com
Massachusetts Businesses Battle Over Lizzie Borden’s Legacy
By Bob Hudson
Sep 5, 2008 - 4:23:15 PM
“Lizzie Borden took and axe
Gave her mother 40 whacks,
When she saw what she had done
She gave her father 41.”
Two
Massachusetts businesses are battling over the macabre legacy of Lizzie Borden, the former Sunday school teacher, accused in the 1892 hatchet deaths of her father and stepmother.
The owner of the Lizzie Borden Bed and Breakfast in
Fall River, which is in the home where the slayings took place, has filed a federal lawsuit to prevent a new museum and gift shop in
Salem from using Borden's name. Donald Woods says the attraction would infringe on his trademark of "
Lizzie
Borden
Museum" and siphon business away from
Fall River, 80 miles south of
Salem, where the killings took place on a hot August day.
Fall River Mayor Robert Correia said the double-murder mystery is one of his community's top tourist attractions. Borden was acquitted but widely believed to be guilty. No one else was ever charged. Mayor Correia says, "It's not something we are proud of that happened, but it's a fact," he said. "It has become a mystery that enthralls people, and to that extent, I'd love to see businesses here take advantage of that."
Leonard Pickel plans to open the Lizzie Borden museum this weekend in
Salem, a historic seaport famous for its 17th century witch trials. "About 600,000 tourists come to
Salem looking for the dark side of history," he said. He said the new museum should help bring more interest to
Fall River. "The majority of the people that are walking past our door have no idea even what state the Borden murders took place, much less what city," Pickel said. "By us explaining to them the place that the murders happened is only 80 miles south of here, it's going to drive traffic to
Fall River." Pickel's group owns www.lizziebordenmuseum.com
Woods is asking a judge to prevent the group from using the term Lizzie Borden in a trade name, trademark, domain name or e-mail address. His attorneys also want the judge to order the
Salem business not to represent itself as affiliated with the
Fall River business, or to engage in conduct that will cause confusion over the relationship between the two businesses. Pickel says his
Salem facility would also draw more visitors to the Fall River Historical Society, a nonprofit that maintains the largest collection of artifacts relating to Borden's life and trial. A hearing on the case is not scheduled until after this weekend's planned opening of the new museum in
Salem.
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