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Unburying the Hatchet
Even if you don’t distance yourself from a notorious relative, you’d probably have a hard time identifying with that black sheep. So maybe it’s good that when actress Elizabeth Montgomery accepted the title role of the 1975 move The Legend of Lizzie Borden, she didn’t know the suspected double-murderess was her sixth cousin once removed.
Published family histories can be key in a case of alleged genealogical links because they let you trace multiple generations at once. I searched the Family History Library catalog www.familysearch.org for the women’s family names and found several histories, including Genealogy of the Barney Family in America and Descendants of Joseph Tripp.
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It still took quite a bit of sleuthing to find the connection. The books ignored a few generations and—like many genealogies—didn’t continue female lines beyond a woman’s children, so I had to inspect a number of books. Then began the real fun: piecing together the clues to build a pedigree, and verifying it in original records. The evidence suggested that both Montgomery and Borden descend from Samuel Luther and Mary Abell, who were among the first settlers of Swansea, Mass.
Is the beloved star of TV’s Bewitched really related to an axe murderer? You’ll find whodunit theories at www.crimelibrary.com/lizzie/lizziemain.htm. We may never know whether Lizzie’s the culprit, but at least we can solve the genealogical mysteries.
—Rhonda McClure
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