Emaline A Baker

Brief Life History of Emaline A

When Emaline A Baker was born on 8 May 1869, in Shannon, Missouri, United States, her father, George Baker, was 40 and her mother, Cynthia Ellen Douglas, was 26. She married Morgan Bailey Smith on 6 March 1890, in Carter, Missouri, United States. They were the parents of at least 6 sons and 3 daughters. She lived in Carter, Missouri, United States in 1920 and Parma, New Madrid, Missouri, United States in 1930. She died on 1 October 1955, in Willow Springs, Howell, Missouri, United States, at the age of 86, and was buried in Reynolds, Dallas, Missouri, United States.

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Family Time Line

Morgan Bailey Smith
1867–1939
Emaline A Baker
1869–1955
Marriage: 6 March 1890
Cyrena Smith
1891–
Cyril Cicero Smith
1891–1981
Elma Cyrene Smith
1893–1987
Guy Arnold Smith
1894–1983
Granvil C Smith
1896–1981
Leonard Dewey Smith
1899–1974
Morgan Bailey Smith Jr
1902–1985
Howard Chandler Smith
1906–1964
Cynthia Priscilla Smith
1909–2000

Sources (10)

  • Emma Smith, "United States Census, 1930"
  • Emmaline E Baker Smith, "Find A Grave Index"
  • Miss Emma Baker in entry for Morgan B Smith, "Missouri, County Marriage, Naturalization, and Court Records, 1800-1991"

World Events (8)

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.

1870 · Giving all the right to vote

The Act was an extension of the Fifteenth Amendment, that prohibited discrimination by state offices in voter registration. It also helped empower the President with the authority to enforce the first section of the Fifteenth Amendment throughout the United States. Being the first of three Enforcement Acts passed by the Congress, it helped combat attacks on the suffrage rights of African Americans.

1896 · Plessy vs. Ferguson

A landmark decision of the U.S. Supreme Court upholding the constitutionality of racial segregation laws for public facilities if the segregated facilities were equal in quality. It's widely regarded as one of the worst decisions in U.S. Supreme Court history.

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.

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