Southwest Jewish History
Volume 2, Number 4, Summer 1994
Solomonville: A Jewish Town on the Frontier in Arizona Territory
The Memoirs of Anna Freudenthal Solomon
Anna Freudenthal Solomon, c. 1890
When about two years old my parents told me that I was in a trance
about a half an hour. I woke up out of this for a life full of
experience. My dear parents had just lost a child, a brother of mine who
died from the cholera. I recovered from the cholera and grew very strong
and hardy. My parents were not in very good circumstances, but worked
themselves up, got to do well, did a very good business in a very small
Polish town adjoining the Russian border. My parents were liked and
respected by everybody. Everybody came to my father for advice. But
things had to take a big change for us. My poor mother was a great deal
sick. There was no school in the town where we lived. My dear mother was
anxious to move to a city where we would have the opportunity of an
education. My father finally made up his mind to sell out his business,
which he did, to a cousin of mine, Solomon Lesinsky.
We moved to Krushwitz where my father rented a house and started a new
business. This was a very sad move for us. Everything went wrong. My
parents lost everything they possessed in one year. We left Krushwitz for
a very small town, with a very few goods, then I was already nine years
old. In one year I had learned how to read and write in Krushwitz. I
then already helped my parents in the store, but things did not change.
It went from bad to worse. Within one year again, we moved to another
place, thinking times would change with us, but they did not. Meantime we
were a family of seven children.
There was some money sent us from America from my uncles and cousins,
and also a request that my father should go to New Mexico, but the idea
for a man who has a wife and seven small children to leave them to
themselves was dreadful. My poor mother felt very bad about it, but I was
at that time fourteen years old. I encouraged father to go. I was too
young to realize the danger of being exposed to a lot of German Soldiers
and German and Russian peasants, Polish smugglers, who smuggled foods from
Germany to Russia. We had at that time a little grocery store, also a
boarding house. My dear father finally left for New Mexico. Oh, how
blessed was the hour when we received our first letter telling us of his
safe arrival in New York, then in New Mexico.
My father was successful in business. Of course, he had to undergo a
great many privations. New Mexico was a very wild country to live in
those days, especially during the war, in the year 1868. Meantime, my
dear mother and myself were struggling along taking care of our little
business and the smaller children.
We continued our dry goods business for since we had to borrow money
and pay big interest on it, it was a hard struggle to keep it up. My
brother Phoebus who at thirteen years of age came to New York, and whom my
Uncle Julius Freudenthal sent to school, and after a year or so sent to
New Mexico, worked for the firm of Freudenthal and Lesinsky's, and earned
the first year by very hard work and privation, $700.00, and sent some
home to our parents. After this our live was somewhat happier as my
brother Phoebus sent all his earnings home so that enabled us to live
comfortable.
My second brother Morris went to New Mexico while my youngest brother
Wolff studied medicine. My two sisters, Henriette and Frieda, went to
school. My husband, Isidor Solomon, came on a visit to his home, his
parents living in Krushwitz. Our parents on both sides were old friends.
We got acquainted and were married two months after our engagement. My
brother Phoebus sent to my parents $2,000.00. They gave my husband
$1,000.00 and the other was used up for wedding and trousseau. The first
time I saw my father cry was when I was getting ready to leave home.
The wedding was celebrated in a Park Hotel. It was beautiful. My dear
mother looked so happy. I never will forget the happy smile on her dear
face, but the parting was very sad. When she told me good bye I knew that
I would never see her again although my husband promised to send me home
after six years, but circumstance made it impossible for me to go to
Europe.
My sick brother died after I was married. My eldest sister Henriette
was married five years after me. My husband was established in business
in Towanda, Pennsylvania. We lived in Towanda four years, where my three
oldest children were born. My eldest son, Charles was born in Towanda, my
eldest daughter Eva in Mnechung. We lived in Mnechung one year, then
returned to Towanda where my second daughter rose was born. The four
years I lived in Towanda I was the most homesick person on earth. It was
lucky I had my children to take up my time. In the year of '76 business
was getting very dull and my husband sold his business to his partner,
that is, his part. My father wrote to my husband not to open a business
in the east, but go to New Mexico. We decided to do so.
We sold everything we possessed except our three children, Charles, who
was three years old; Eva was two years, and my youngest daughter Rose
three months old, and started on our journey for New Mexico. We had a
very hard trip even on the railroad, traveling with those three babies was
bad enough, but when we reached La Junta, Colorado, the end of the
railroad in those days, and had to travel by stage, packed in like
sardines, traveling day and night for six says. only stopped to change
horses and get something to eat, like chili con carne and frijoles. I
forgot, we stopped over in Santa Fe three days, then we started for Las
Cruces, New Mexico, where we had our two brothers, Phoebus and Morris
working. At that time my Uncle Julius Freudenthal and Lesinskys', our
cousins. When we got there I was tired out to death. My brother and the
Lesinskys' were very nice to us. I lived in the house of Charles Lesinsky
for two weeks, then we went looking for a house. We found one, the best
one in town, but I could not help having tears come into my eyes when I
saw the mud floors and mud walls, but after a few days I had the house
looking very nice and comfortable.
I lived at Las Cruces with the children four months while my husband
was looking around for some business location. He finally found a place,
and this is the place where we lived for thirty years. It was very hard
for us to go to a country and a place as this was in those days. There
were only four Mexican shanties in the whole place, besides our own shanty
which my husband rented for $25.00 per month. After we lived here a short
time we bought the place and adjoining ranch, and we had the place laid
out in lots several years after that, and had the court house build on
several of the lots.
I am far ahead of my story. When we were going to leave Las Cruces we
bought a two- seated wagon called a buckboard, and a pair of horses. Into
this we put a tent, some bedding, our cooking utensils, our provisions,
our clothes and our children, and ourselves. We also brought a Mexican
clerk along, but he came horseback. It took us several days and nights to
get here, but, oh, how often I was frightened thinking that I heard
Indians. I did not expect to get here alive with our children. Just
before we reached this place we heard a dreadful noise that Indians make
when they are on the warpath. It was a beautiful moonlit night. I
remembered as if it was last night. When we were almost home the Mexican
told us it was a Coyote, as the Indians make the same peculiar noise when
on the warpath, as a coyote have.
We arrived in Pueblo Viejo (later Solomonville) about 12 o'clock at
night in August. We slept on the mud floor. Nest morning my husband woke
me up to show me some Indians that were here on passes from San Carlos
Reservation. I never had seen an Indian before.
After living there about three months our ox wagons with goods from Las
Cruces, arrived. What a happy day that was, as until then we had no bed
to sleep in, no stove to cook on, no table to eat off, no flour to bake
bread. I baked bread out of corn meal for three months, in a dutch oven,
cooked our meals outdoors like campers do, but I did not mind all that as
I could sell goods and the future commenced to look brighter. Still we
had some very dark and sad times. I could not get anyone to help me with
my three babies. The worst of all was the washing. I was never used to
doing washing. After I had done my second one I took sick with chills and
fever. My baby, Rose also took sick. My husband sent for the doctor to
Fort Grant, but the Mexican came back after three days and said he could
not get the doctor to come. Meantime I started to feel a little better
and felt like eating something, so we bought a chicken and a Mexican woman
cooked it for me, but when I found out what she left in it, I could not
eat it.
Chills and fever were dreadful in our place. There were pools of green
water standing all over the place. The new land started to be worked,
that all helped the sick along. My baby was sick and I had chills and
fever for two years, but that did not hinder us form doing a good deal of
business.
We had a contract to deliver charcoal to the Clifton Mining Company,
who belonged to my uncle J. Freudenthal and my cousins, Charles and Henry
Lesinsky. This started our business, and also started the valley. We
employed a great many people cutting the mesquite wood, making charcoal,
and shipping some to Clifton by ox teams. This took a great deal of hard
work, to oversee and manage it. We could not get any decent person or
persons to help us. My husband attended the outdoors work while I
attended the store and the housework. We also started building; at first
a bedroom, then a store. I felt like the Queen of England when that store
was finished. We kept on building right around the old house. We kept a
carpenter building for eight years.
The last year has been an exciting year for us. It was also a new
starting point in our lives. Harry had got hurt and my husband had to
take charge of the business. Harry finally went to New York, stayed with
my brother Wolff for a while and then went to work. The town where
Harry's store was burned down and we lost a good deal. The children then
decided that we should live in California. Here I am living at present.
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