Showing posts with label Baker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Baker. Show all posts

Saturday, June 29, 2013

Hester Baker


Hester Baker's gravestone is located between that of her husband Benjamin and her granddaughter, "Little Emma." She was born Hester Sarles around 1811. In 1850, she and Benjamin, a farmer, had four children.

1850 US Federal Census
Ten years later, the Bakers had five children, including 25-year-old Phebe, who is inexplicably missing in the 1850 census. Had she been living with another family at the time? Catherine, who was one year old in the 1850 census, isn't present in the 1860 census. Did she die?

1860 US Federal Census
Hester died in 1864, and Benjamin in 1873. Their son Henry T. Baker married a woman named Susan and had three children in 1870.

1870 US Federal CEnsus
Benjamin and Hester's daughter Josephine married William Oliver Mosher, a farmer, in 1865. "Little Emma" is Josephine and William's daughter, who died in 1866 at one year old. A second child of the Moshers, Willie, also died at age one year in 1874 and is buried in the cemetery. Of William and Josephine's ten children, only two were alive in 1900, when the couple was living in Poughkeepsie, and 58-year-old William was working as a day laborer.

Josephine died in 1935 at the age of 89. This is her obituary in the Mount Vernon Daily Argus:

Mount Vernon Daily Argus, 19 March 1935

  1. Benjamin Horton Baker (1812-1873) m. Hester Sarles (1811-1864)
    1. Phebe H. Baker (1835-)
    2. Philo H. Baker (1841-)
    3. Henry T. Baker (1844-) m. Susan A. (1845-)
      1. Ella M. Baker (1865-)
      2. Emma S. Baker (1867-)
      3. Charles H. Baker (1869-)
    4. Josephine Sarles Baker (1848-1935) m. William Oliver Mosher (1842-before 1920) in 1865
      1. Julia Mosher (1864-)
      2. Emma Mosher (1865-1866)
      3. Edith Mosher (1868-)
      4. Willie H. Mosher (1873-1874)
      5. William A. Mosher (1879-) m. Jennie C. (1882-)
        1. Dorothy L. Mosher (1903-)
    5. Catherine A. Baker (1849-) 
    6. Seth A. Baker (1850-)
    7. Susan A. Baker (1851-)

Cemetery Update


We made some interesting discoveries at the cemetery today. You may remember the giant cross made out of footstones that was laid across the foundation of the nineteenth-century church sometime in the 1960s. Well, today we discovered that the cross includes a few headstones, too. Above is the headstone of Amy Myers, who died April 16, 1842 at the age of 88, before and after I cleaned it. We are trying to figure out where she belongs.

We also discovered this fragment of a headstone, with the letters "LUC" and "Sam." Our best guess is that this is Lucinda, or Lucretia, or possibly Lucy, the wife of Samuel.



Below, you can see Susan holding the broken piece of Almira Gilbert's gravestone in place. The piece was sitting right beside the gravestone. As you can tell by the difference in color, it's been a long time since these pieces were whole. You can also see the remains of the cement that were used to fix the stone in the mid-20th century. While well-intentioned, the 20th-century restorers generally didn't do a very good job, using materials that broke down just a few decades later.


Lastly, here is the work I did on the grave of Hester Baker. I wasn't able to remove the ugly black stuff at the bottom, but the grave is a lot brighter now. The base of this stone is not original, but was used to cement the stone upright sometime in the mid-20th century. The base wasn't very well designed - as I was washing the stone, water kept collecting at the foot of the stone on top of the base. If water is allowed to sit on the base like that, the cement keeping the stone in place will probably break down sooner rather than later.

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

17: The Baker Children

Grave of Susan M. Baker (source)
Susan M. Baker, whose grave is pictured here, was the last and oldest of four children that Daniel and Rosanna Baker buried in the cemetery. The others were Emeline Baker (1860-1869), William Baker (1864-1869), and Salena A. Baker (1865-1868). Yet Daniel and Rosanna aren't buried in the cemetery.

Daniel was the son of William, a farmer, and Esther Baker, and his siblings included Catherine, Amy, and Sylvester.

1850 US Federal Census
When first looking at the 1870 census, I was confused by the fact that Emeline Baker, whose death date is given as January 29, 1869, is still alive. Then I looked at it again. This Emeline Baker was three months old in 1870; the Emeline Baker who died in 1869 was nine years old. It seems that the Bakers had named their infant daughter after their daughter who had just died. 

1870 US Federal Census
At this point the Bakers had already seen three children into the grave, and Susan would die within a year. At the same time, Rosanna had just recently given birth to Emeline, and Sylvester the year before.

Rosanna, who was born in Ireland, would face one more tragedy in the next decade - the death of her husband. In 1880, she lived with her two surviving children, Sylvester and Emeline. At the age of 12, Sylvester worked in a drug store and attended school.

1880 US Federal Census
By 1900, Rosanna lived with her one surviving child, Emma (Emeline) Baker Bedient, Emma's husband George, and their son George Jr. in Danbury, CT. Sylvester Baker's death is confirmed by the number of his mother's children: six, of whom one was living.

1900 US Federal Census
Rosanna seems to have died by 1910, when her daughter and her family were renting an apartment at 441 Main Street in Danbury. George's mother Jennie was now living with them. George worked as a salesman of silver plates. This census reveals that the Bedients had lost one child.

1910 US Federal Census
George, Emma, and Jennie were still living together in Danbury in 1920. By 1930, both George and Jennie had died, and Emma was living on her own. She seems to have died before 1940.

What about George Bediant, the couple's only surviving child? Here he is documented in the Connecticut Military Census of 1917:

Connecticut Military Census 1917
At age 26, he could ride a horse but not drive a car. According to his World War I Draft Registration Card, he had blue eyes and brown hair.

In 1920, George was living in Bridgeport, CT, with his wife Louise and their two small children, Viola and Louis. Louise was French and had come to the United States in 1906; she was now a naturalized citizen. George worked as a machine operator in a cartridge shop.

1920 US Federal Census
In 1930, the family had moved to Beacon Falls, where both husband and wife worked in a rubber factory. Ten years later, George still lived in Beacon Falls, but Louise wasn't with him. He still worked as a machine operator.

Louis Bedient enlisted in World War II in December 1941. At that point he was single and 64 inches tall. He later married Anne Marcy, had two children, and worked as a machinist. He died in 1988 in Danbury, CT; Anne died in 2003.
  1.  William Baker (1793-) m. Esther (1809-)
    1. Catherine O. Baker (1831-)
    2. Amy Ann Baker (1832-)
    3. Daniel P. Baker (1837-before 1880) m. Rosanna (1838-before 1910)
      1. Susan M. Baker (1858-1871)
      2. Emeline Baker (1860-1869)
      3. William Baker (1864-1869)
      4. Salena A. Baker (1865-1868)
      5. Sylvester Baker (1868-before 1900)
      6. Emeline Baker (1870-before 1940) m. George S. Bedient (1869-before 1930)
        1. George Harrison Bedient (1890-after 1940) m. Louise (1891-before 1940)
          1. Viola Bedient (1916-)
          2. Louis G. Bedient (1918-1988) m. Anne Marcy (1915-2003)
            1. Two children (living)
        2. Unnamed child (d. young)
    4.  Sylvester H. Baker (1839-)