THOMAS FREESTONE AND ANN FALL -- PERSEVERANCE!
Submitted By: Angus H. Belliston (more
stories by this author)
THOMAS FREESTONE AND ANN FALL
By Angus H. Belliston
Thomas Freestone, the father of my great grandfather, George Freestone, was born
in Fixton, Suffolk, England on 19 May 1795. This was a comparatively prosperous
time in
England, and Thomas could have stayed there in relative comfort. But in about
1825 Thomas left England to emmigrate to Prince Edward Island, Canada. In August
1837, Thomas, now forty-two years old, married Ann Fall, age twenty-four. Ann
was born in England too, on 6 August 1812 in Aldburrough, Yorkshire, and had
moved to Prince Edward Island with her parents in about 1818. Ann was a gentle,
religious, refined lady.
This couple sought to improve their fortunes by moving in 1840 to the U.S.A.
They settled on a farm in central Ohio. Life was good for these faithful
Methodists. They loved the soil which they farmed, and prospered modestly for a
few years while their children were being born -- George in 1838, James in 1840,
Elizabeth Ann in 1842, Rhoda in 1844, Phoebe Ellen in 1847 (she died as an
infant), Johanna in 1849, Emma Sarah in 1852 and Jane Marie in 1855 -- eight
children in all, of which seven lived to adulthood.
The LDS missionaries came in 1850 and baptized them. Ideally, everything should
have gotten better, but got worse instead. In about 1851 they lost their farm,
which had been mortgaged to pay for a season of severe illness. In 1852, they
felt the spirit of gathering to Zion, sold another small acreage they had and
all their other possessions, acquired a wagon and, in late summer, joined the
Saints who were heading west. They struggled through fall rains and mud and
reached Mt. Pisgah in Iowa in a snowstorm on Christmas Day.
The family stayed in Mt. Pisgah, Iowa over the winter of 1852-53, and finally,
with help from kind fellow Saints, arrived in deep poverty at Winter Quarters.
On their journey, the father and older boys had worked at anything they could
do, for food or money to sustain them. When they reached Council Bluffs in the
spring, they found an emigrating company nearly ready to leave for the West.
Again they found help from other Saints, quickly acquired an outfit and
supplies, and joined them.
Their journey across the plains was an arduous one, but late in 1853 they
arrived in American Fork. One year later the family moved to “Mountainville”
(later named Alpine) where they lived in the fort for protection against the
Indians, while they began to re-establish their affairs. Exerting all their
efforts, they partially overcame their hunger by eating roots, pigweed and wild
onions, and beat back enough crickets to raise a full crop of grain. In spite of
their many trials the hardy family hung on to their testimonies and endured.
In 1858, the Freestone family had been in Utah five years. The oldest child,
George (my great-grandfather), was twenty years old, the youngest, Jane, only
three. The father, Thomas, was sixty-three years old. The family discussed the
possibility of moving to another location where they might find more security.
Thomas went to Southern Utah on a scouting mission, probably looking for a new
family location. Near Parowan he was ambushed by hostile Indians and killed by
an arrow. One of the Indians sent word to the family of this tragedy, and
claimed he had mercifully put the dying man out of his misery and buried him in
an unmarked grave.
The older boys became the providers for the growing family. Three years later
George married and left home. Four years after Thomas’ death, as mother Ann
visited one day with her bishop about their difficult circumstances, he advised
her to marry again, and introduced her to a man named Hodnett. The two went to
the Endowment House in Salt Lake City and were married the very next day.
Hodnett proved to be a good provider for the family, but was reputed to have
been hot tempered and difficult. However, Ann was good natured and gentle, and
they managed together.
With the unmarried children, they moved to Orderville and put all their sheep
into the United Order (retrieving them again later when the Order failed). Ann’s
health and eyesight failed in her later years and she moved back to Alpine to
live in the home of her youngest daughter. She died there on Christmas day in
1888, at age seventy-six.