Background
He was born in Gloucestershire, eldest son of John Freeman and his wife Anne Croft. He was educated at Christ Church, Oxford and called to the Bar in 1674.
He was born in Gloucestershire, eldest son of John Freeman and his wife Anne Croft. He was educated at Christ Church, Oxford and called to the Bar in 1674.
University of Oxford.
In 1706 he became Lord Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer and within a year was appointed Lord Chancellor of Ireland, in which capacity he also acted as Speaker of the Irish House of Lords. He is listed as one of the trustees of the King"s Inns in 1706. In 1710 Freeman was suddenly afflicted with what was described as "a disorder of the brain" which was said to have deprived him entirely of his reason.
Certainly he was unable to continue in office, and he died shortly after resigning from the Chancellorship.
According to Elrington Ball, Freeman was a fine lawyer who gained general respect in Ireland, being noted for good humour and charity as well as legal ability. His early death, following on the tragic collapse of his mental powers, was genuinely mourned.
A pamphleteer eulogised his brief tenure as Chancellor as "a golden age".