Ann Freeman
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Ann Freeman née Mason (24 June 1797 – 7 March 1826) was a British
Bible Christian The Bible Christian Church was a Methodist denomination founded by William O’Bryan, a Wesleyan Methodist local preacher, on 18 October 1815 in North Cornwall. The first society, consisting of just 22 members, met at Lake Farm in Shebbea ...
preacher.


Life

Freeman was born on 24 June 1797 in
Northlew Northlew is a village and civil parish in the West Devon district of the county of Devon, England. To the west of the village, but within the parish, are the hamlets of West Kimber and East Kimber. The village falls within the electoral ward of ...
in Devon. Her parents, William and Grace Mason, were farmers and she was one of thirteen children brought up in Devon where she was apprenticed to be a
dressmaker A dressmaker, also known as a seamstress, is a person who makes custom clothing for women, such as dresses, blouses, and evening gowns. Dressmakers were historically known as mantua-makers, and are also known as a modiste or fabrician. Notab ...
. Her family moved to a farm in Northcott in
Sutcombe Sutcombe is a village and civil parish in the local government district of Torridge, Devon, England. The parish, which lies about 5.5 miles north of the town of Holsworthy, is surrounded clockwise from the north by the parishes of West Putford ...
where she and her sister Mary's religious interests caused a family dispute. She heard James Thorne of the Bible Christians when she was 19 and was immediately inspired to be a preacher. She and her sister were sent away for a few days because they had joined the Methodist Society. The Bible Christians were gaining more members and after Mary and Ann returned the numbers soon included their mother and five more of her children. They became part of this break away sect, sometimes called Bryanites, that was led by Cornishman William O'Bryan who had left the Methodist church in 1815. She attended the fifth quarterly meeting of the Bible Christian church which was held on her aunt's property. The Bible Christians were revivalists like the early Methodist church, but they refused to conform to traditional model of a church. Ann committed herself to preaching and she abandoned her dressmaking. She would walk up to 30 miles a day travelling around Devon and Cornawall. She would preach and also withstand hostility from people who disagreed with her stance.Amy Culley, ‘Freeman , Ann (1797–1826)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, Oct 200
accessed 4 Feb 2017
/ref> Women like Ann, her sister and Serena Lake made up 30% of the Bible Christians preachers, but despite this Ann and her sister attracted interest because they were women. Ann was confident and argued theological points with her movement's founder William O'Bryan when she met him at the group's first conference at Launceston in Cornwall, on 17 August 1819.Badash Farmhouse
BritishListedBuildings, Retrieved 5 February 2017
She argued that Christians could find instantaneous redemption despite the prevailing view that this was gradually earned. Moreover, she argued that believers could be guided directly by God - which undermined the Church's hierarchy including O'Bryan. By 1823 she was in London speaking on the Strand. In 1824 she impressed the
Brighton Herald The ''Brighton Herald'' (renamed ''The Brighton Herald & Hove Chronicle'' in 1902 and the ''Brighton & Hove Herald'' in 1922) was a weekly newspaper covering the boroughs of Brighton and Hove in southeast England. Founded in 1806 as the first new ...
press when she spoke to over a 1,000 people on a nearby hill. On 9 August 1824 in London she married Henry Freeman who she had known since 1820 in Devon. The marriage, and her differences with the church, seemed to lead to her breaking with the Bible Christians, but not with evangelism. That year and the following the two of them were in Ireland where they moved to the ideas of the Quaker church. They addressed people of several denominations including Catholics and Protestants. They faced hostility, and despite this and her own tuberculosis, Ann would tour by herself or just with a female friend. Ann had to returned to her parents’ house due to ill health in 1826 where she died on 7 March. She was buried a week later in Sutcombe. Her life is known because of her autobiography. Her letters, poems and journal were edited and published by her husband after she died.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Freeman, Ann 1797 births 1826 deaths People from the Borough of West Devon Evangelists