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77:, a charge which he accepted, though there had been dissensions there which made his work difficult. His connection with the chapel lasted for forty years, during which time the congregation became one of the most prosperous in the county, and the chapel was entirely rebuilt. In his earlier time, when the
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were battling for equal rights, he engaged in the political movements of the day, but his after-life was devoted to the work of his calling and the promotion of the charitable and educational institutions of the town. No one in that community was more heartily respected than Baker, and he received
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On 30 September 1835 Baker had married Mary Crook (1802–1879), daughter of
Jeremiah Crook, a Liverpool merchant formerly of Bolton, another of whose daughters married Baker's brother Thomas; there were no children.
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on 27 August 1800. He was the eldest son of Thomas Baker of that town. After the usual school education; and when unusually young for such a charge, he took the management of Baylis's school at
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A Critical
Dictionary of English Literature and British and American Authors, Living and Deceased, from the Earliest Accounts to the Latter Half of the Nineteenth Century
111:, but at the end of three years he removed to Birmingham, where he could have the attention of a brother, who held a high medical position. He died on 26 May 1867.
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139:; Alfred Baker (1815–1893), an eminent Birmingham surgeon; and Harriet (1805–1850), who married Edward White Benson (1800–1843) and became mother of a second
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123:, Birmingham, and his wife, Charlotte Mould. Several of the children attained unusual distinction. In addition to Franklin Baker, they included
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in 1833–4 and later a solicitor in
Manchester where he was active in municipal affairs, mayor, and historian of the Unitarian congregation of
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Besides occasional sermons and pamphlets on matters of passing interest, he was the author of various articles in the
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Franklin Baker was the eldest son and third of ten children of Thomas Baker, headmaster of the
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66:'s trustees he was enabled to go to Glasgow, where he spent three sessions and graduated M.A.
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On the completion of his college course in 1823 he was invited to become minister of
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225: This article incorporates text from a publication now in the
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History of the Rise and
Progress of Nonconformity in Bolton
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50:. One of hie early friends and advisers was the Rev.
82:gratifying testimony of this in an offer from the
32:(27 August 1800 – 26 May 1867) was an English
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191:(online ed.). Oxford University Press.
185:Webb, Robert K. (2009) . "Baker, Franklin".
241:. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
127:, famous as an instructor of deaf people;
86:of the county to insert his name in the
188:Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
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54:, of Birmingham; another was the Rev.
275:Clergy from Birmingham, West Midlands
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280:Alumni of the University of Glasgow
131:(1810–1886), Unitarian minister at
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238:Dictionary of National Biography
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168:Allibone, Samuel Austin (1897).
99:. He also published in 1854 a
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265:19th-century Unitarian clergy
205:UK public library membership
71:Bank Street Unitarian Chapel
270:English Unitarian ministers
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25:Franklin Baker (1800-1867)
145:archbishop of Canterbury
88:commission of the peace
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107:, on the banks of the
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197:10.1093/ref:odnb/1113
60:University of Glasgow
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141:Edward White Benson
137:Cross Street Chapel
121:Lancasterian School
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216:Attribution
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79:dissenters
44:Birmingham
34:Unitarian
133:Sidmouth
37:minister
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115:Family
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48:Dudley
105:Caton
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Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.