|
John Baker and his children Rebecca, Mary and Dorothy. His wife,
Dorothy, died before or during the trip.
Joseph Baker, his wife Mary, and children Sarah and Joseph. (and
perhaps Robert)
Hannah Baker
Sarah Baker
Mary Baker (the younger)
Another emigrant, Joseph Jr., was supposedly the nephew of the
above five siblings. We do not know who his father was, although
the will of Robert Baker of Edgmond gives us three possiblities.
We do not know a lot about the family in England. Their father
Robert had died in 1672, and their mother Mary a few years
later. Several brothers and sisters did not emigrate: Peter,
Robert, Thomas, Elizabeth, Mary (the older), Elizabeth and
Margarett. Because of the two Maries mentioned in the will, it
is likely that all these children may be by two different wives
of Robert. Robert is supposed to have been descended from Sir
Richard Baker the Chronicler, who wrote a history of the Kings
of England. We have not been able to establish this descendancy,
but it is still under research. In the past, several
genealogists have said that the Baker siblings were the children
of a John Baker, not Robert, but the will makes it fairly clear
that Robert is the father. The Hearth taxes of the Manor of
Edgmond in 1671 show that John and his family lived in one house
with one hearth; and that Joseph and his mother (and presumeably
three younger sisters) lived in another house with one hearth.
In 1672, after the death of Robert, Mary, his widow, signed a
fostering agreement with a Walter Littleton for the tuition and
education of Hanna, Sarah and Mary, who are minors. The other
children who did not emigrate in 1684 presumeably were married
and settled elsewhere than Edgmond. After 1684 there were no
Bakers left in Edgmond.
After coming to the New World, John died in 1685, shortly after
his arrival in Philadelphia. Joseph, now head of the family,
bought and sold several parcels of land, and at some time before
1699, bought 500 acres in Chester (now Delaware County). This
was in Edgmont township, to which he probably gave the name,
after his home in Shropshire. Joseph was elected member of the
Pennsylvania Assembly several times. The Bakers of Edgmont
married and proliferated, many staying in the area, where they
still have descendants, while others moved west and helped to
build the new country.
Will of Robert Baker of Edgmond, Salop.This will is on file at
Shrewsbury, Shropshire, England.
In the name of God Amen. I Robert Baker of Edgmond on the County
of Salop beinge aged and weake in Body, but sound and in perfect
Mind and Memory (praised be God ffor it) do ordaine and Make my
last will and testament in Manner and fform
ffollowinge------------------------ffirst,
I give and Bequeath unto Mary my Now wife all my Goods, Cattell
and household stuff, (except three Brass potts) together with
our Lease of the Brademeadows with issues and profitts thereof
duringe all the terme that shall be unexpired at the time of my
decease out of which said goods and Lease I will that my said
wife shall pay all my debts and legacies------------------It:
I give the said three brass potts (before excepted) unto my
three daughters (viz) to Mary the younger, to Sarah and Hanna,
each of them one-----------------It:
I give and bequeath unto my son Thomas our Lease of the Marsh
peece] with the issues and profitts thereof, duringe the terms
therein specified, and whereas the said Thomas my son hath not
natural abilities and discretion to Manage it himself it is my
will that my said wife and Joseph my son shall take and
[?rrve??- compare give-] the rents issues & profitts thereof and
dispose the same to the best benefitt and advantage of the said
Thomas My son, and if he that said Thomas happens to decease,
then I give the said Lease and profitts thereof? unto Peter my
son. It:
I give unto John Baker my son twelve pence and to Dorothy his
wife and Rebecka his Daughter five shillings apeeceIt:
I give unto Elizabeth my Daughter, Mary the older my daughter,
Robert my son and Margrett my Daughter twelve pence
apeece-----------It:
I give and bequeath my house and tenement in Hinstock (after the
terms already granted), unto Mary my wife the better to inable
her to pay my debts and legacies, and after the said debts and
legacies shall be ffully satisfied and paid I give the reversion
of the said house & tenement unto my said three Daughters Mary
the Younger Sarah and Hannah share and share alike,
And I also give the tenement wherein my son John now liveth
(after the terms already granted) unto my said three daughters
Mary the Younger, Sarah and Hanna During the terms in a lease
thereof then to Come and unexpired, It:
I give unto my two sons John and Joseph tenn shillings apeece
and
to my son Peter I give my best drippinge pann, And it is my will
that after my debts and legacies are paid,
my said son Joseph shall have half the tenement wherein I now
live and half the lands thereto belonging equal with his Mother,
during her terms in the Lease.
Lastly I ordaine Constitute and appoint the said Mary my wife
the Sole executrix of this my last will and testament & do
hereby revoke, Make ffrustrate, null and void all former and
other wills wheresoever by me made & do declare this to be my
last will and testament. In witness whereof I have hereunto putt
my hand and seale the third day of October Anno Dm
1671------------------Sealed subscribed and published Robert
Baker
in sight and presents of us: his mark (mark)
Jane (mark) Holloway
her mark
Joseph Cooke
An Inventory of all & singular the Goods Cattells & Chattells of
Robert Baker Late of Edgmond of the County of Salop taken and
appraised the fourth day of June Anno Dm 1672 as
ffolloweth:Impr: 2
see: Descendants of Robert Baker of Edgmond. Author: Anne
Wiegle.
Location: www.springhillfarm.com/baker/.
Mary UNKN (Wife) b. About 1610 Marriage: BEF 1638
Children:
Peter BAKER b. About 1638 in Edgemont, Shropshire, England
Mary BAKER b. About 1640 in Edgemont, Shropshire, England
Robert BAKER Jr b. About 1642 in Edgemont, Shropshire, England
Elizabeth BAKER b. About 1644 in Edgemont, Shropshire, England
Margarett BAKER b. About 1646 in Edgemont, Shropshire, England
Thomas BAKER b. About 1648 in Edgemont, Shropshire, England
Mary LNU (Wife) b. Before 1620 in Edgemont, Shropshire, England
Marriage: 1650
Children:
John BAKER b. About 1650 in Edgemont, Shropshire, England
Joseph BAKER Sr b. About 1655 in Edgemont, Shropshire, England
Hannah BAKER b. About 1664 in Edgemont, Shropshire, England
Mary BAKER b. About 1666 in Edgemont, Shropshire, England
Sarah BAKER b. About 1667 in Edgemont, Shropshire, England
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Mother: PHILIPPA TYRELL |
_THOMAS CORNWALLIS __+ | (1333 - 1383) _JOHN CORNWALLIS ____| | (1383 - 1446) | | |_JANE HANSARD _______+ | (1342 - 1384) _THOMAS CORNWALLIS Esq._| | (1410 - 1484) | | | _ROBERT BUCKTON _____ | | | (1360 - 1408) | |_PHILLIPPE BUCKTON __| | (1390 - ....) | | |_ BRAHM _____________ | (1360 - ....) | |--WILLIAM CORNWALLIS | (1447 - 1519) | _____________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | |_____________________ | | |_PHILIPPA TYRELL _______| (1416 - 1516) | | _____________________ | | |_____________________| | |_____________________
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Mother: Mary Beaufort Howe OWINGS |
The following story was told to Newland DeVault by Russell
(Frederick Russell) DeVault, son of John DeVault:
"One day, about noon, a Confederate soldier, on horseback, rode
up to the DeVault Tavern, requesting food, and, as there were
several bands of Union Soldiers nearby, he did not dismount. The
meal was prepared by Mary DeVault, daughter of John DeVault, who
owned the tavern. She served it on a tray, placed on top of her
head, while the soldier ate. He thanked her; asked her name, and
after the war was over, wrote to her father asking permission to
call. Permission was granted, and the result was a marriage. The
soldier was Dr. E. O. Guerrant, a surgeon in the Confederate
Army during the Civil War." (Russell DeVault was Mary's
brother.)
For several years after the war Dr. Guerrant practiced medicine
in Kentucky. He then decided to study for the ministry and
become a preacher. He left Mary and the children at the Tavern,
Mary's old home, while he went to school. During the summer of
1875, he went over to the home of Henry's grandaughter, Louise
(Dewald) Kitzmiller. Louise, at the age of 77, and all from
memory, gave Dr. Guerrant the genealogy of the DeVault family.
The genealogy consisted of a few remarks about Henry Dewald and
wife, when they came to America (which was wrong by two years)
and the cost of the journey. She referred to Henry as: "Henry
DeVault, a Huguenot, born in France, and married to Catherine
Marie Greaver, a German woman." She listed all of their
children, whom they married, listed all the grandchildren and in
most cases whom they married. The only date of birth of any of
the children was that of Henry, Jr. of Salem, Indiana, for which
she had his dates of birth and death. It was just a list of
names only, but most remarkable, as all were given from memory.
The information was taken down by Dr. Guerrant. He gave his
father-in-law, John DeVault, a copy and Louise Kitzmiller had a
copy.
Over the years a number of copies were made from these two. The
Kitzmiller copy came into the hands of her brother's family
(Daniel Dewald) of Washington County, Tennessee. This copy had
probably been kept up to date more than any other. James D.
Dewald had it in his possession for many years. The copy of John
DeVault had been partly brought down to Frederick's branch as
well as other branches he knew. Frederick Russell DeVault, Dr.
Guerrant's brother-in-law, gave Newland DeVault his first copy,
through his nephew John DeVault of Mexico, Missouri in the year
1935.
Dr. Edward O. Guerrant's "Society Of Soul Winners"
Bath County Minister Once Directed Over 100 Churches
By James Clell Neace - 1997
Back issues of The Kentucky Explorer contain a number of
references to Dr. Edward Owing Guerrant (1838-1916), who was
born and reared at Sharpsburg, Kentucky, in the Bluegrass
Region, near Mt. Sterling, Montgomery County.
At a time when church houses and high schools were practically
unknown in Eastern Kentucky, Dr. Guerrant took upon himself the
stupendous task of producing six of the first church houses in
Breathitt County. Furthermore, he helped establish at least
three advanced educational facilities; each typically featuring
a secondary school with dorms, a church, a hospital, and an
orphanage. These included Highland Institute, Guerrant,
Breathitt County; Witherspoon College, Buckhorn, Perry County;
and Stuart Robinson College, Blackey, Letcher County.
Funding for this immense building program was largely obtained
from private donations and through fundraising forays of Dr.
Guerrant and others. Landowners in a community where a building
was being erected would often furnish free timber, stones, and
other building materials. Much of the labor was furnished by
volunteers.
In our efforts to understand how Guerrant could accomplish so
much, let us take a brief look at the background of this
remarkable man. Born in 1838, Edward Guerrant graduated from
Centre College at Danville in 1860. In 1862, influenced by Rev.
Stuart Robinson, a Louisville minister, he joined the
Confederate army of Brigadier General Humphrey Marshall,
commander of the Fifth Kentucky Regiment. Once encamped at Hager
Hill in Johnson County, but then stationed in Virginia, this
regiment was largely composed of Breathitt Countians and other
Eastern Kentuckians. Later, the Fifth Kentucky joined the famous
Kentucky Orphan Brigade (CSA), where Guerrant advanced to the
rank of captain and served admirably as adjutant general, in
turn, to three different army commanders.
Once, when marching through Breathitt County by way of
Troublesome Creek, Guerrant, to his great surprise, did not see
a single church house in the entire county. This was etched into
his memory and, many years later, became one of the factors that
influenced him to return to Breathitt County in 1882 "to serve
my former comrades-at-arms."
After the Civil War Guerrant obtained his Doctor of Medicine
degree by attending Jefferson Medical College in Philadelphia
and Belleview Medical College in New York. He then began medical
practice at Mount Sterling. In 1873 he obtained his Doctor of
Divinity degree from the Union Theological Seminary at Richmond,
Virginia, and became a minister. In 1881 Guerrant was promoted
to crusading evangelist for Eastern Kentucky. There he held
religious revivals in a large tent in remote mountain
communities. Often he would put on his "other hat" and hold
medical clinics there, also.
Guerrant's building program in Eastern Kentucky soon followed.
In 1885 he left full-time crusading and relocated at Wilmore,
Jessamine County, Kentucky, where he established his
headquarters. From this base he continued fundraising, the
building program, and the recruitment of missionaries for the
Kentucky mountains.
Guerrant's crowning achievement came in 1897 with the founding
of "The Society of Soul Winners," with headquarters at Wilmore.
At one time he was directing the work of over 100 ministers of
various church denominations scattered throughout the mountains
of Kentucky, Tennessee, and North Carolina. His objective was to
get churches of all the various denominations to work together
toward common goals.
The Society hired a field secretary, whose duty was to ride
horseback hundreds of miles and visit the various 100 or more
churches affiliated with the Society; give them encouragement;
and coordinate their efforts. This proved to be such a grueling
task that the turnover rate was high.
Guerrant often made fundraising forays and/or recruitment
speeches at various religious conventions. It was a speech of
his at a joint YMCA-YWCA convention in Ohio that motivated Mr.
and Mrs. George E. Drushal to join the Society and establish a
church/school dorm/gym complex at Riverside Institute, Lost
Creek, Breathitt County. When applying for the job the Drushals
went to Wilmore. There they were told by Guerrant that the last
two couples he had dispatched to Lost Creek directly departed in
disgust. The Drushals were not fazed and asked to go.
The Society paid the Drushals a monthly stipend, until their own
church became interested in the venture and provided funds. As
was the case for the Drushals, many of the missionaries sent by
the Society to rural Kentucky mountain communities stayed on and
exerted great influence there.
Dr. Guerrant's final major project for "serving his comrades"
was the construction of the educational complex at Blackey,
which he named Stuart Robinson, for an evangelist friend of his.
The project was completed just two years before his death in
1916. Stuart Robinson and the various other educational
complexes that Guerrant helped produce served their intended
purposes well; but in recent years, having funding problems,
they were phased out, one by one. The buildings have been put to
use for other purposes.
This brings us back to the question of how Guerrant was able to
serve his wartime comrades so well. First of all, he lived in an
age of close-knit people of similiar interests and possessed of
absolute standards. This contrasts sharply with present-day
relativism and multiculturalism; with widely-shifting standards
for conduct, faith, morality; and civic responsibility.
Secondly, Guerrant had gone through a horrendous war in company
with his comrades, and he knew them well. Thirdly, Guerrant had
an abiding faith that moved mountain people to join with him in
his projects.
Now approaching the century mark in age, a few of the workers
who were involved in Dr. Guerrant's programs are still with us.
They are a valuable resource, the potential of passing on
know-how and wisdom they have gleaned down through the years.
Their death is like the burning of a library.
With this in mind, Kentucky Explorer reader James G. Cornett of
Burnside, Kentucky, a graduate of Stuart Robinson, searched out
the lady who taught him English at Stuart Robinson for an
interview. He recorded her autobiography, which he generously
shares with us.
The name of this former Stuart Robinson English teacher is Lois
McClintock Ellis. She turned 97 years old in October 2000.
Well-loved as a teacher, at the time of this writing, Miss Ellis
was mentally alert, took walks, and taught a Bible class. She
was a typical example of the talented people who were attracted
to Dr. Guerrant's programs.
Here is Miss Ellis' autobiography, as it was told to James G.
Cornett:
"I was born October 16, 1903, at Day, Arkansas, the daughter of
McClintock Todd Ellis (born May 12, 1870; died December 28,
1946) and Lois Adeline Murphy Ellis (born October 7, 1866; died
June 16, 1935). I had one brother, William Lelend Ellis (born
November 25, 1899; died June 15, 1982).
"My father was a Presbyterian minister, who preached for 50
years. My mother had little formal education and was a very
refined Christian lady. I was named for both my father and
mother. I have been known most of my life by my nickname,
'Mackie.'
"I attended elementary school at Doraville, Arkansas. After
finishing the 10th grade, I enrolled in Linwood College near
Gastonia, North Carolina. I then attended Women's College (now
Erskine College) at Due West, South Carolina, from 1921 to 1923,
where I graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree.
"I was never interested in teaching in public schools. My
interest was always in mountain mission and church-affiliated
schools. I taught at the Blue Ridge Academy, a mountain mission
school at Ararat, Virginia; at Highland Institution at Guerrant,
Kentucky; and at Montreat College in Black Mountain, North
Carolina.
"During my summers, I attended several colleges, including:
Peabody Teacher's College in Nashville; the University of
Southern California; Furman University in Greenville, South
Carolina; Biblical Seminary in New York; and Northwestern
University in Chicago, Illinois. I received a Master's degree in
English from the University of South Carolina in 1948.
"I started teaching at Stuart Robinson High School in 1948, and
I stayed there until the school closed in 1957. After leaving
Kentucky, I taught for 12 years at Nacoochee School at Rabun
Gap, Georgia.
"I retired in 1969 and moved to Taccoa, Georgia. I then taught
evening extension courses from Stuart McConnell College at the
high school building in Taccoa.
"After being retired nine years, I went to Brazil at the age of
74 and taught English to missionaries' children for one school
year.
"I have travelled extensively. I spent six weeks in Holland,
five weeks touring Europe, went to the Holy Land, and to Hawaii.
On one trip I saw the Passion Play at Oberammergau, Germany.
"I fell and broke my hip in 1984. At the request of a cousin,
who lived in Abbeville, South Carolina, I moved there. My father
was born and reared in this city, and I had been in and out of
Abbeville County many times.
"My hair is perfectly white. I weigh about 118 pounds. I get
around using a three-pronged walker in the house, and a
two-wheeled walker, when I take my half-mile walks each day.
"The population of Abbeville is about 7,000. The store buildings
are quaint and interesting. The people are very friendly. The
opera house has many plays, and people come from great distances
to see these.
"I am a member of the Abbeville Presbyterian Church."
Caption for first photo:
Dr. Guerrant is seen here preaching to the people of Athol, a
small community on the Lee-Breathitt County line. Note the man
to his right is General O. O. Howard, the famed Civil War
soldier. Howard was a Federal soldier, while Guerrant served the
South during the Civil War.
Caption for second photo:
Edward Owings Guerrant, seen here in his Confederate Army
uniform. He was born February 28, 1838, in Sharpsburg (Bath
County), Kentucky, and died November 27, 1916. He is buried in
the Lexington, Kentucky, Cemetery.
Caption for third photo:
A scene near Elkatawa, Breathitt County, Kentucky, ca. 1910, at
one of Dr. Guerrant's tent meetings. These mountain folks are
ready for church.
Bluegrass Confederate: The Headquarters Diary of Edward O.
Guerrant $49.95
Afterword: William C. Davis
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 0807124117 Pages: 584
Publish Date: 11/1/1999
Publisher: Louisiana State University Press
Product Description
Edward Guerrant's massive, eloquent journal -- twenty-eight
manuscript volumes -gathered considerable interest shortly after
the Civil War among fellow veterans as a reliable source for
reconstructing their shared ordeal. In the years to follow,
however, the never-published diary gradually slipped from view.
Now, "after a long while" of more than a century, Captain
Guerrant's diary is brought to light again in Bluegrass
Confederate. For historians as well as acolytes of Civil War
memory, the author's scrupulous daily entries will prove
valuable indeed.
Diaries by Kentucky Rebels are a rarity; the soldiers themselves
were atypical. Essentially cut off from their homes and families
back in the Union Bluegrass, they had only their personal
reserves of spirit and will to keep their patriotism alive.
Edward Guerrant, a teacher and habitual diarist, was motivated
by love, first of one woman and then another, to record his
wartime experiences, beginning January 30, 1862, and ending
April 11, 1865. Exceptionally intelligent and well educated,
Guerrant spent much of the war attached to the headquarters of
Confederate generals Humphrey Marshall, William Preston, George
Cosby, and, most notably, John Hunt Morgan. From that vantage,
he was able to see the inner workings of campaigns in the
little-known Appalachian region of eastern Kentucky,
southwestern Virginia, and east Tennessee, where some of the
most vicious small-scale fighting occurred. He witnessed the
controversial massacre of black Federal soldiers at Saltville in
October 1864 and assisted Morgan on his famed raids into
Kentucky.
Guerrant brought considerable powers of observation and insight
to bear on his commentary. He evocatively portrays the
homesickness all soldiers felt, often stirring testimony to the
influence of religion in the war, and mirrors wonderfully the
interests and concerns of a young man out in the world for the
first time. The secluded life of Appalachian common folk --
their courtship, hardship, and culture -- is given riveting
glimpse.
Through sensitive, judicious editing, William Davies and
Meredith Swentor have made Guerrant's journal gleam, carefully
sitting through the captain's words and retaining what is
essential, relevant, and interesting, while unobtrusively
supplying background and interpretive notes. By their skilled
efforts, one of the longest extant Confederate diaries as well
as one of the most significant officer's diaries from the Rebel
side is ready for reading.
Article - "Frederick DeVault", by Martha (Butcher) Crowe;
History of Washington County Tennessee 1988
[523436]
her father's home (called Sunnyside) across the road from the
DeVault Tavern.
_Peter (Pierre) GUERRANT (GUERIN) Jr._+ | (1737 - 1819) m 1756 _William GUERRANT ___| | (1782 - 1808) m 1800| | |_Mary PERROW (PERAULT) _______________+ | (1739 - 1805) m 1756 _Henry Ellis GUERRANT M.D.__| | (1808 - 1876) m 1835 | | | _(Query Research) PUTNEY _____________ | | | | |_Mary PUTNEY ________| | (1780 - ....) m 1800| | |______________________________________ | | |--Edward Owings GUERRANT C.S.A. and M.D. D.D. | (1838 - 1916) | ______________________________________ | | | _Elihu OWINGS Judge__| | | (1780 - ....) | | | |______________________________________ | | |_Mary Beaufort Howe OWINGS _| (1812 - 1850) m 1835 | | ______________________________________ | | |_Mary R. HALL _______| (1790 - ....) | |______________________________________
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Father: WILLIAM LESLIE Mother: MARGARET BALFOUR |
_____________________ | _____________________| | | | |_____________________ | _WILLIAM LESLIE _____| | (.... - 1513) | | | _____________________ | | | | |_____________________| | | | |_____________________ | | |--GEORGE LESLIE | (.... - 1558) | _____________________ | | | _MICHAEL BALFOUR ____| | | (.... - 1513) | | | |_____________________ | | |_MARGARET BALFOUR ___| | | _ANDREW OGILVY ______ | | (.... - 1461) |_JANET OGILVY _______| | |_MAJORIE GLENN ______+
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Mother: Ann |
_Jeremiah UPSHAW ____ | (1640 - ....) _William UPSHAW Gent._| | (1668 - 1720) m 1702 | | |_Cordelia____________ | (1640 - ....) _Forrest UPSHAW _____| | (1718 - 1759) m 1749| | | _____________________ | | | | |_Hannah FORREST ______| | (1670 - 1763) m 1702 | | |_____________________ | | |--Leroy UPSHAW | (1750 - 1803) | _____________________ | | | ______________________| | | | | | |_____________________ | | |_Ann_________________| (1725 - 1795) m 1749| | _____________________ | | |______________________| | |_____________________
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_ VALOINES __________________________________________________________ | _PHILIP de VALOINES of Panmure______________| | (1180 - ....) | | |_____________________________________________________________________ | _WILLIAM de VALOINES of Panmure_| | (1180 - 1219) | | | _____________________________________________________________________ | | | | |____________________________________________| | | | |_____________________________________________________________________ | | |--LORA de VALOINES | (1200 - ....) | _ROBERT I de QUINCEY Lord of Buckley_________________________________+ | | (1130 - 1197) | _SAIRE IV de QUINCEY 1st Earl of Winchester_| | | (1155 - 1219) m 1173 | | | |_ORABELLA LLOUCHARS _________________________________________________+ | | (1133 - 1203) |_LORETTE de QUINCEY ____________| (1180 - ....) | | _ROBERT III "Blanchmains" Harcourt de BEAUMONT 3rd Earl of Leicester_+ | | (1135 - 1190) m 1155 |_MARGARET de Harcourt de BEAUMONT __________| (1155 - 1234) m 1173 | |_PETRONELLA de GRANTMESNIL __________________________________________+ (1134 - 1212) m 1155
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