William Freeborn

For the founding settler of Portsmouth, see William Freeborn (settler).

William Freeborn (born December 13, 1816 (January 3, 1817), death June 3, 1900)[1] was a pioneer in Minnesota, Montana, and California. Freeborn County, Minnesota is named in his honor.[2][3]

Pioneer

Born in Richland County, Ohio in 1816, Freeborn moved to Saint Paul, Minnesota in 1848. By 1853 Freeborn had removed to Red Wing, Minnesota. According to Upham Freeborn "had large interests, as also at Cannon Falls."[2] From Red Wing, Freeborn moved to Montana, where he spent a season as a gold miner in the Rocky Mountains. In 1868 Freeborn arrived in Santa Margarita, California, where he settled on a ranch. Back in Minnesota, Thomas Newson wrote of Freeborn, "He was a man of progressive and speculative ideas, energetic, always scheming, and had a happy faculty of getting other parties interested in his enterprises. He was a quietly spoken man, of rugged appearance; self-possessed, and never was afraid to venture."[4]

Politician

Freeborn served as a member of the Minnesota Territorial Council in the Minnesota Territorial Legislature from 1854 to 1857, and was mayor of Red Wing, Minnesota in 1858, resigning after less than a year. He also served on the Saint Paul, Minnesota city council.[2][5]

Notes

  1. Video of grave site in San Luis Obispo on YouTube
  2. 1 2 3 Upham, Warren (1920). Minnesota Geographic Names: Their Origin and Historic Significance. Minnesota Historical Society. p. 198.
  3. Gannett, Henry (1905). The Origin of Certain Place Names in the United States. Govt. Print. Off. p. 131.
  4. Newson, Thomas M. (1886) Pen Pictures of St. Paul, Minnesota
  5. Minnesota Legislators Past and Present-William Freeborn
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