In March 1879, he and his confrere
Johann Baptist von Anzer boarded a ship to
Hong Kong, where they arrived five weeks later. They stayed there for two years. Freinademetz was based in
Sai Kung Peninsula until 1880 and set up a chapel on the island of
Yim Tin Tsai in 1879. In 1881 they moved to the southern region of the Province of
Shandong, to which they had been assigned. At the time of their arrival, there were 12 million people living in that province, of which 158 had been baptized. Freinademetz was very active in the education of Chinese laymen and priests. He wrote a
catechism in
Chinese, which he considered a crucial part of their missionary effort. In 1898, he was sick with
laryngitis and
tuberculosis, so Anzer, who had become the
bishop of the region, and other priests convinced him to go to Japan to recuperate. He returned, but was still not fully cured. When Anzer had to leave China for a journey to Europe in 1907, the administration of the
diocese was assigned to Freinademetz. File:Statue of St Joseph Freinademetz in St Joseph Chapel of Yim Tin Tsai.JPG|Statue of St. Joseph Freinademetz, S.V.D.St Joseph's Chapel,
Yim Tin Tsai, Hong Kong, China File:SacredHeartParishKamuningjf1015 15.JPG|Statue of St. Joseph Freinademetz, S.V.D.St Joseph's Chapel,
Sacred Heart Parish Kamuning,
Philippines File:Patung Santo Joseph Freinademetz di Gereja Santo Mikael (2024).jpg|Statue of St. Joseph Freinademetz, S.V.D.St Michael Church,Kranji,
Bekasi, West Java, Indonesia Image:Freinadametz-Kirchenfenster.jpg|
Stained glass image of Freinademetz,
Liesing,
Vienna, Austria ==Death==