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Thomas Freeman

Thomas Freeman was born in Mitchell, Ontario, on Junee 27, 1864 of Irish parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Freeman.  He was the youngest in a family of five:  William, Sarah (Mrs. Sam. Slack), Jim, Ellen (Mrs. Wm. Campbell), and Thomas.
The parents, with their young family, moved to a farm eight miles north of Wiarton.

Jim Freeman was the first Freeman to come to Manitoba.  He came in 1882.  He worked his way on the railroad and came to Snowflake, Manitoba.  From there he came to Killarney where he homesteaded on 20-4-16.  For a while he batched with Jim Wilson, until he built his log house.  He married Jennie Young and had a family of ten.  Later, he moved to Alberta where he passed away.
The “call of the west” came to Thomas Freeman (my father) in 1891, and on March 17th, he left Wiarton, Ontario, and came to Killarney, Manitoba, bringing his aged parents with him.

He bought the east half of 21-4-16, bought a yoke of oxen, and broke up a lot of prairie.  That summer he built a frame house.  Other buildings were needed, so Tom went to Pelican Lake bush, took out logs, hewed them, and put up a log stable and a log granary.  In later years he built a nice barn.  He was a good man with the broad axe and was known as one of the best hewers around.  In Ontario he had hewed large timber, some of which was shipped to England for boat making.

Elizabeth Victoria Henry (later to be his bride) was born of Irish parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Henry, on August 18, 1870, in the township of Keppel in Gray County.  She was educated at Lindenwood school and attended Wolseley Anglican Church.  She came out to Manitoba in March 1897, and on June 16, 1897, a double wedding took place in Holy Trinity Anglican Church, Killarney.  She and Thomas Freeman, and Ben Cook and Sarah Black (niece of my father) were united in marriage by the Reverend Beecham.  The wedding party was held in the Orange Hall at Fairhall (now the Fairfield district.).

Nine children were born of the Freeman union:  May (Mrs. Ed. Scott), Fannie (Mrs. W. Finnen), Thomas (deceased in 1958), Sadie (Mrs. A. Maguire), Olive (Mrs. A. Wilson), William, Ben and Russell (and one boy deceased in infancy).  These children all attended Tisdale School, which had been bult in 1895, and St. John’s Anglican Church, built in 1903.  The Reverend W. R. Johnson was the first rector.
The social life of the district consisted of house parties, dances in the Orange Hall, concerts and oyster suppers at the school.  Mother was chief oyster cook.  The annual summer picnic, held at Mr. S. Stephen’s, was a happy event, looked forward to by everyone.
My father loved horses and gave them good care.  He was also very fond of shooting.  One morning he went out early, with horse and buggy, after geese.  He dug a hole and waited.  The gray honkers came right over.  He fired two shots and brother home eleven geese.
Friendly visiting was done extensively in the early days, and a frequent visitor was Grandma Stephens who walked miles and cheered many a home.  The neighbours always seemed ready to lend a helping hand, and the writer can well remember the visits of Mrs. J. Wilson (Aunt Fanny to the Freeman kids) who at times of sickness was ready to come, day or night, and help in her quiet Christian manner.  Others close by were Mr. Stephen Stephens, and Mr. and Mrs. Dave Robinson and Jim Robinson.  The kind deeds of all the neighbors meant so much when doctors were far away.  The telephone did not come till 1908.

The women made their own bread and butter.  Wheat was made into flour at the Allan Snider mill in Killarney.  Preserving was done, as wild fruit was in abundance and sugar not too expensive.  Sewing was done for the whole family, and the women worked hard with very few conveniences.

The pioneers had many hard experiences, with hail, drought, frost, and the most treacherous of all – the prairie fire.  Sweeping down from the west, over the nineteen hills, flames burning the long prairie grass soon became an inferno of terrific heat.  Anyone who could plough a furrow or swing a wet bag was out trying to save his home or stacks of feed.  It put fear into everyone.

Memories of the early days make us appreciate what the pioneers have done for us.  With their courage and determination, much has been accomplished, and they have given us inspiration for the future.

Thomas Freeman was an Anglican by faith, and a Loyal Orangeman.  He passed away April 15, 1915, at the age of fifty-one years.           
(Written by Frannie Freeman) Finnen