|
| DESERT SOLITAIRE: Nevada was Freeman's second home.
Courtesy Churchill County Museum |
A few weeks after
excerpts from the 19th-century diaries of Mary
Freeman appeared in the November/December issue (“Roble
Confidential”), we heard from a Nevada historian
who filled in some of the gaps in Freeman’s life
story.
According to Cherry Jones, president of the Nevada
Women’s History Project, Freeman spent several
summers before, during and after her years at Stanford
at a ranch in Stillwater, Nevada, that her father had
purchased when she was 12. Freeman, who graduated
from Stanford in 1897, married Edward Armstrong in 1902.
Fifteen months later, he was murdered by a man
who claimed Armstrong had ruined him financially. In
1908, Freeman married John Hammond Crabbe and moved
to San Francisco.
Freeman was an avid amateur photographer, and many
of her photos from the 1890s and early 1900s—which
she developed herself—are among the first documenting
interactions between members of Nevada’s Paiute
tribe and local families. “They have also
provided wonderful information about the history of
Nevada women,” Jones adds.
Freeman’s photographs appeared in a traveling
exhibition in 1994.
|