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Gail ___, inventor of condensed milk
Answer for the clue "Gail ___, inventor of condensed milk ", 6 letters:
borden
Alternative clues for the word borden
Usage examples of borden.
Borden, resting in her attic room, was startled to hear Lizzie Borden, Andrew’s daughter, cry out, “Maggie, come down!
Bridget ran back to the house, and Lizzie sent her to summon the Borden sisters’ friend, Miss Alice Russell, who lived a few blocks away.
At the time of the murders she was 26 years old, and had been working in the Borden household since 1889.
She did not spend the night of the murders in the Borden house, but at a neighbour’s, although she spent the next night (Friday) in her third-floor room, leaving the house on Saturday, never to return.
Adelaide Churchill, saw that something distressful was happening at the Borden house.
He ran the four hundred yards to the house, saw that Andrew Borden was dead, and deputized a passer-by, Charles Sawyer, to stand guard while he went back to the stationhouse for assistance.
By 11:45am , the Medical Examiner, William Dolan, passing by the Borden house and noting the flurry of activity, was on the scene.
Andrew Jackson Borden (1822-1892), Lizzie’s father The Accused:Miss Lizzie Andrew Borden (1860-1927) The Household:Miss Emma Borden (1849-1927), Lizzie’s sisterJohn Vinnicum Morse (1833-1912), Lizzie’s maternal uncle, visitingBridget (“Maggie”) Sullivan (1866-1948), the Borden maid The Judges:Josiah C.
Wood, Professor of Chemistry, Harvard Relatives, Ministers, Friends, Neighbours, WitnessesSarah Gray Whitehead, Abby Borden’s younger half-sisterAbby Borden Whitehead Potter, Sarah’s daughterHiram Harrington, Andrew Borden’s brother-in-lawLuana Borden Harrington, Andrew Borden’s sisterW.
Buck, minister, Central Congregational Church, Fall RiverMiss Alice Russell, friend of the Borden sistersMrs.
The bodies of the Bordens were still on the dining room table, awaiting the arrival of the undertaker.
The first is the book by Edmund Pearson, The Trial of Lizzie Borden, and the second is Robert Sullivan’s Goodbye Lizzie Borden.
He was a taciturn man who never spoke of the Borden case in the thirty years he lived after its conclusion.
Not only have a great number of books been written about each case, each with its own slant or theory, but these murders have inspired dramas, novels, poems, and, in the case of Lizzie Borden, even a ballet and an opera.
Two of his essays on Lizzie Borden are reprinted in the book of his writings edited by Gerald Gross, one of which discusses the myths surrounding the case.