Josiah opened Freeman’s Forge, quickly becoming one of the most respected blacksmiths in the city. I managed the business, my mind finally valued as it always should have been.
We had five children.
Thomas (1858), William (1860), Margaret (1863), James (1865), Elizabeth (1868).
In 1865, Josiah created metal braces that allowed me to stand — and walk — for the first time since childhood.
“You always walked,” he told me gently.
“I just gave you different tools.”
My father visited twice, witnessing our happiness firsthand. Before his death, he wrote me a letter:
Giving you to Josiah was the smartest decision I ever made.
We lived 38 beautiful yearstogether.
I died March 15th, 1895.
Josiah followed the next day.
Our children said his heart simply stopped.
We are buried together in Eden Cemetery beneath a shared headstone:
Ellanar & Josiah Freeman
Married 1857 – Died 1895
Love that defied impossibility
Our daughter Elizabeth published our story in 1920: My Mother, the Brute, and the Love That Changed Everything.
Historians still study our lives — the disabled white woman society called unmarriageable, and the enslaved black man they called a monster — who found in each other the freedom the world denied them.
This is our legacy.
This is our truth.
This is our love that changed history.