John William Baker

Brief Life History of John William

When John William Baker was born on 24 August 1850, in Grant, Kentucky, United States, his father, Dotson Throp Baker, was 27 and his mother, Mary Ann Ashcraft, was 27. He married Jane Lockhart Covert on 27 April 1881, in Grant, Kentucky, United States. He lived in Flat Lick, Knox, Kentucky, United States in 1880 and Grant, Boone, Kentucky, United States in 1880. He died on 31 December 1919, in Falmouth, Pendleton, Kentucky, United States, at the age of 69, and was buried in Broad Ridge Cemetery, Dry Ridge, Grant, Kentucky, United States.

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Family Time Line

John William Baker
1850–1919
Jane Lockhart Covert
1861–1946
Marriage: 27 April 1881

Sources (9)

  • John W Baker in household of Dotson Baker, "United States Census, 1860"
  • Legacy NFS Source: John W. Baker - Government record: Census record: birth-name: John W. Baker
  • John W Baker, "Kentucky, County Marriages, 1797-1954"

Spouse and Children

World Events (8)

1861

Kentucky sided with the Union during the Civil War, even though it is a southern state.

1863

Abraham Lincoln issues Emancipation Proclamation, declaring slaves in Confederate states to be free.

1870 · The Fifteenth Amendment

Prohibits the federal government and each state from denying a citizen the right to vote based on that citizen's race, color, or previous condition of servitude. It was the last of the Reconstruction Amendments.

Name Meaning

English: occupational name, from Middle English bakere, Old English bæcere, a derivative of bacan ‘to bake’. It may have been used for someone whose special task in the kitchen of a great house or castle was the baking of bread, but since most humbler households did their own baking in the Middle Ages, it may also have referred to the owner of a communal oven used by the whole village. The right to be in charge of this and exact money or loaves in return for its use was in many parts of the country a hereditary feudal privilege. Compare Miller . Less often the surname may have been acquired by someone noted for baking particularly fine bread or by a baker of pottery or bricks.

Americanized form (translation into English) of surnames meaning ‘baker’, for example Dutch Bakker , German Becker and Beck , French Boulanger and Bélanger (see Belanger ), Czech Pekař, Slovak Pekár, and Croatian Pekar .

History: Baker was established as an early immigrant surname in Puritan New England. Among others, two men called Remember Baker (father and son) lived at Woodbury, CT, in the early 17th century, and an Alexander Baker arrived in Boston, MA, in 1635.

Dictionary of American Family Names © Patrick Hanks 2003, 2006.

Possible Related Names

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