Friday 13 February 2015

Ellen Elizabeth Freestone / Hocking / Hilton (1880 - 1919)

Some relatives’ lives are defined by particular events. Generally this occurred when they did things that were unexpected – especially for the time.  Ellen was one such woman. 

Ellen was born on 10 October 1880 at Stoney Creek, about 40 kilometres south of Wellington, New South Wales.  She was the fourth child of Agnes (nee Crowe) and Edmund William Freestone.  After her birth, the family relocated to Windsor near Sydney for a number of years before moving to Orange and then returning to Stoney Creek, which was then known as Farnham. Stoney Creek / Farnham no longer exist. They serviced the gold mines that still dot the area, but are almost completely exhausted.

On 18 May 1898 seventeen year old Ellen married Francis Edward Hocking at Farnham.  Seventeen is too young to get married! The marriage was not successful. Ellen appears to have NOT been a person that just puts up with a bad situation. I’ll never discover what Francis thought of her!  Fortunately the couple had no children together. 

By mid 1902 Ellen was pregnant – just not with Francis Hocking’s child. 

In early September 1902, The Sydney Morning Herald reported that Francis was seeking a “dissolution of his marriage” to Ellen on the grounds of her misconduct with William Couldwell and Frederick Hilton, who were both joined as co-respondents in the suit. It was noted that Ellen, and the co-respondents did not appear at the hearing. Presumably because of Ellen’s pregnancy, the final decree for the divorce was set for 3 months, instead of the normal 12 months. This meant that the divorce was granted on 10 December 1902. Divorce was not common at that time, and was not easy to obtain or looked upon favourably. Nor was it considered good form to be married to one man and having a child to another. Presumably the judge decided to allow a quick divorce in order to ‘right the wrong’! On the same day her divorce was granted, Ellen married Frederick Warner Hilton, who was eighteen years old and one of the co-respondents at her divorce hearing, at the Presbyterian Church at 31 Bent Street in Sydney. I wonder what her relationship was with William Couldwell…

Ellen and Frederick’s first child, Frederick Kenneth, was born three weeks after their wedding, on 31 December 1902. A second son, Stanley Melville was born in January 1905 in Hurstville, Sydney. In April 1906 Ellen visited her parents, who still lived at Farnham. Young Stanley contracted pneumonia and, despite seeing the local doctor, died on 28 April 1906. Stanley was buried on 30 April in Omigal Cemetery (this has now been renamed the Stuart Town Cemetery). A third son Mervyn Leslie was born in Hurstville on 6 August 1907.

Sadly Ellen Elizabeth Hilton died on 17 June 1919 at her home at Oxford Street, Mortdale.  She was 38 and the death certificate indicates that she died from toxaemia, which could have been from pregnancy. 

Fred and Merv had very fond memories of their mother.  She was obviously quite a lively woman and very likeable!

She was buried on 19 June at Woronora Cemetery, Sydney.  She was the first of her ten siblings to die. She also left behind 17 year old Frederick and 12 year old Mervyn – both of whom missed her and perhaps never quite recovered.

[Relationship to SNR = Great-great grandmother]


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