BAKER FAMILY. Among the well known pioneer families of Seneca County, and of Eden Township, was the
Baker family of four brothers: Franklin, Thomas, John and Richard, and four sisters:
Mary Baker, Sophia Stearns, Lucretia Arnold, and Ann Knapp. They were the children of Judge Samuel Baker, a
native of Branford, Conn., and a descendant in the fourth generation of Thomas Baker, who settled at Milford,
Conn., in 1639, whence in 1650 he removed to East Hampton, L. I., which town he represented in the Colonial
Assemblies of New York and Connecticut. During the invasion of New York by Burgoyne, Samuel Baker, then a
boy of thirteen, was captured by Indians, taken to Burgoyne's camp and sold to a British officer. He was released
by the surrender of Burgoyne's army, and afterward unlisted in Col. Marinus Willett's regiment and served until
the close of the war. He was one of the first settlers in Steuben County; was for many years first judge, and one of
the most prominent citizens of that county. Franklin and Thomas Baker came to Eden Township in 1822. Franklin
entered the farm known as the Umsted farm on the Kilbourne road, where he resided until his death in 1831.
Thomas entered the farm adjoining, and there lived until his death in 1863. Samuel Baker and Mrs. C. Y.
Brundage, of Eden Township, and .Mrs. Albert Ewer of Tiffin are children of Thomas Baker. His widow, Sarah B.
Baker came to Seneca County with her father, Col. Boyd, in 1821, and since 1863 has resided in Tiffin. John
Baker came soon after his brothers and settled upon the farm on Rock Creek upon which he died in 1876. Mary
Baker, with her husband, Joseph Baker, settled in Scipio Township in 1822. Mr. and Mrs. Stearns settled on Rock
Creek in 1828. Ten years afterward Mr. Stearns died, and his widow married the late William Fleet, and soon
afterward died. John B. and George W. Stearns, two of the largest farmers of Scipio Township, are the sons of Mr.
and Mrs. Stearns. Mrs. Knapp and Mrs. Arnold removed to Garden Grove, Iowa, where they now live. Richard
Baker, the youngest of the four brothers, came to Seneca County in 1835, and purchasing several small farms
made the fine farm of 400 acres upon which he resided until 1871, and which is now owned by his son, Grattan H.
Baker. In 1836 he was married to Fanny Wheeler, daughter of Grattan H. Wheeler, who was a member of
Congress, and for many years a State Senator from Steuben County, N. Y. and grand-daughter of Captain Silas
Wheeler, who, in April, 1775, enlisted in Capt. Thayer's company of Rhode Island Volunteers; was at Bunker Hill;
with Arnold in his terrible march through the forests of Maine and Canada, to attack Quebec; was captured in the
unsuccessful attack on Quebec, in which Montgomery was killed and Arnold wounded, and kept a prisoner and in
irons until August, 1776, when he was exchanged. He again entered the army; was again captured and taken to
Ireland, whence he escaped to France through the aid of Henry Grattan, the Irish orator and patriot, after whom he
named his only son. In 1871 Richard Baker removed to the farm adjoining Melmore, on which he now resides with
his wife, whom he brought to what was then little more than a wilderness almost fifty years ago. Time and fortune
have dealt kindly with them both. With six sons and twenty grandchildren, into their family, death has never come.
Notwithstanding the weight of seventy-seven years, Mr. Baker is still erect, vigorous, strong, self-reliant, but hind
and tender-hearted. For years his class in the Methodist Sunday-school (of which church he and his wife have been
members for more than forty years) has been the infant class into which no child was too small to enter, and from
which no child was ever willing to go. Of the six sons of Richard and Fanny Baker, Silas is a farmer in Dickinson
County, Kas.; Frank, a lawyer in Chicago; Job, a farmer in Wyandot County: Grattan H., a farmer, and the owner
of the old homestead; Ralph, a farmer at Garden Grove, Iowa, and Richard W., still at home. Richard Baker
brought to his farm, in 1837, thirty pure Spanish merino sheep, the first brought into Seneca County and probably
the first in northern Ohio, and has been one of the most successful wool growers, as well as one of the best grain
farmers in the county.
Trancribed by Bonnie Walsh.
WARNER, BEERS & CO., 1886
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES, Part IV, p.846-847
EDEN TOWNSHIP