Gen. Laurence Baker

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Gen. Laurence Baker

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Hertford County, North Carolina
Death: 1805 (59-60)
Gates County, North Carolina, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Capt. Henry Baker, III and Catherine "Caty" Baker
Husband of Ann Baker and Anna Maria Baker
Father of Henry Baker; Agatha Baker; Elizabeth Harvey (Baker); Dr. Simmons Jones Baker; Dr. John Burgess Baker and 2 others
Brother of Catherine Wynns; Henry Baker; Bray Baker; William Wilson Baker; Elizabeth Maney and 5 others

Occupation: Continental Army officer
Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Gen. Laurence Baker

https://www.ncpedia.org/biography/baker-laurence

Laurence Baker, Revolutionary War patriot, was born at Buckland, the estate of his parents, Henry Baker and Catherine Booth. The first of his family in America was Henry Baker, who settled Buckland in what was then Nansemond County, Va., in the seventeenth century. When the line was surveyed between Virginia and North Carolina in 1728, Buckland fell in Chowan County in the latter colony. Henry Baker II, realizing that his plantation would be in North Carolina, made a present to William Byrd, chief of the Virginia Line Commissioners, in the hope that Byrd would help him retain the surveyorship of Nansemond County. Later county divisions placed Buckland in Hertford County in 1759 and finally in Gates County in 1779. An old armorial seal given to Laurence Baker by his kinsman, Laurence Baker of "Shoal Bay," Isle of Wight County, Va., bears the arms of the Bakers of County Kent. The seal was brought to America by the immigrant ancestor of the Bakers, and, as Buckland is the name of a parish in Kent near Dover, it is plausible that Henry named his new home after his old parish in England.

There is little information available regarding the early life of Laurence Baker. His father died in 1770, and his brother William, having inherited Buckland, resettled on a plantation called Coles Hill not far away. Laurence did not appear in public life until the Revolution. He was a delegate to the Hillsborough convention, 21 Aug. 1775, and was appointed a member of the safety committee for the Edenton District. He was a delegate to the Halifax congress, April 1776, and was appointed major in the Continental Army. Hertford again sent him as delegate to the Halifax convention in November 1776, but he resigned to prepare for active military service. According to his son, he served as a colonel under Colonel Jonas Johnston and General Benjamin Lincoln at the Battle of Stono, where he "acquitted himself like a brave man."

After the war, Baker served for a time as general of state troops. In 1778 he was a member of a commission to mark the site for a court house in the proposed new county of Gates; he served as clerk of court for Gates until his death. In 1801 he was the winner of the lottery held by The University of North Carolina to raise funds for the completion of South Building.

Baker first married Anne Jones, the daughter of Albridgeton Jones of Southampton County, Va., and his wife, Elizabeth, daughter of John Simmons. Anne Jones Baker died about the time Baker left for active service during the war. Later, he married Anna Maria Burgess, the daughter of the Reverend Thomas Burgess, the last Church of England clergyman in Halifax County. By his first wife, Baker fathered three children: Simmons J.; Elizabeth, the wife of Joseph Harvey; and Agatha, who never married. Three more children were born to the second marriage: John Burgess, member of the legislature from Hertford and later Gates; Maria, wife of Richard Smith of Scotland Neck; and Martha, who married Dr. Cary Whitaker of Enfield.

Baker's will, dated 6 Sept. 1805, was probated in Gates County in 1807.

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A Patriot of the American Revolution for NORTH CAROLINA with the rank of MAJOR. DAR Ancestor # A005021

Gen. Laurence Baker served on the patriot side during the American Revolution. At the rank of Colonel, he fought in the Battle of Stono Ferry in South Carolina on 20 June 1779.

Link for info on Battle of Stono Ferry, South Carolina: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Stono_Ferry

A description of Gen. Laurence Baker written 4 Feb 1847 by his son, Dr. Simmons Jones Baker, in "The Baker Family as Remembered" :

"My father was a large man six feet high and weighing two hundred and fifty pounds. He was cheerful but generally grave, a kind husband, father and master, prudent and discreet in the management of his affairs and was universally liked. As a candidate of the convention to decide the Federal Constitution [of which he was a warm advocate] he secured every vote in the county but five. He was the clerk of court of Gates, NC  from the time it was separated from Hertford [1779] until his death [1807].

He married Ann Jones daughter of Capt. Abridgton Jones, of Southampton County VA [whose father was a Welshman] His wife was a sister of Col. Charley Simmons of an English family. My mother had several children, twins twice, of which I am one. My twin brother Albridgton Jones with one or two others died at the time my mother did [1778]. The disease was dysentery and there is reason to believe badly treated. There were four children left. Henry, who died when nearly grown. Elizabeth, Agatha, and myself.
Soon after the death of my mother, my father went into the army. He was Colonel of a regiment, Col. Jonas Johnston of Edgecombe being in command. He was in the battle on Stono in South Carolina under the command of Gen. Lincoln. It was a hard fought battle and I have been told by some who were present that my father acquitted himself like a brave man.
He did not attend the convention at Hillsborough to which as before mentioned he was elected because of the death of my brother Henry about that time.
Soon after the return of my father from the army he married Ann Burgess who made an excellent wife and very kind step-mother. She was the daughter of the Rev. Thomas Burgess of Halifax, an Englishman of the Episcopal faith."

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Gen. Laurence Baker's Timeline

1745
1745
Hertford County, North Carolina
1770
1770
1770
1770
1775
February 15, 1775
Hertford, North Carolina, United States
1785
January 24, 1785
1805
1805
Age 60
Gates County, North Carolina, United States
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