[2] From 1872 to 1892, the house was the property of Andrew Borden, Lizzie's father, who was a bank president[3] and a member of Fall River high society.
He moved his four-person family (his wife, Abby, and his two daughters, Emma and Lizzie) into the home as well as one maid who lived in the attic (Bridgett).
[3] Under the ownership of the Bordens, it was quiet with not a lot of parties from the socialite Lizzie who was too embarrassed to show her house to her wealthy friends.
After Lizzie's trial and acquittal for murdering her father and stepmother in the home, she bought another house located at 7 French Street that she named 'Maplecroft'.
Even relics from media inspired by the murder case were put into the house like photographs of actresses from the movie The Legend of Lizzie Borden.
Zaal stated he would keep the property operating as a bed-and-breakfast and hoped to expand the business to include other Lizzie-Borden-themed activities in the future.
He also plans to implement "[...] a podcast, virtual experiences, themed dinners, bedtime ghost tours of Fall River, murder mystery nights", a wedding venue and add a sixth bedroom to the property.