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Dr Frank Baker

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Dr Frank Baker Veteran

Birth
Pulaski, Oswego County, New York, USA
Death
30 Sep 1918 (aged 77)
District of Columbia, District of Columbia, USA
Burial
Washington, District of Columbia, District of Columbia, USA Add to Map
Plot
Rock Creek, Lot 339 East.
Memorial ID
View Source
Son of the American Revolution.
He was the grandson of Revolutionary Patriot Thomas Baker (1751-1840).

He was the son of Thomas C. Baker and Sybil Weed Baker.
On September 13, 1873, he married Mary E. Cole of Sedgwick, Maine.
They were the parents of seven children. including Margaret Delight Baker Willis (1874-1941).
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Student, Scientist, Teacher.
Baker, Frank (August 22, 1841 - September 30, 1918), anatomist and historian, was born at Pulaski, New York, the son of Thomas and Sybil (Weed) Baker.

The following is from a merge with a duplicate memorial. It appears to have copied from Prabook. The website lists no source for the the following information.
His ancestors, who came from Gloucestershire, England, settled in New England and fought in the Revolutionary War.
In 1861, Baker enlisted in the 37th New York Volunteers, serving until 1863. He then entered the government service at Washington, District of Columbia. He was graduated with the degree of M.D. from Columbian (now George Washington) University in 1880.

After some years of practice in Washington, he became, in 1883, professor of anatomy in the Georgetown University School of Medicine, holding this chair continuously for thirty-five years until his death. During this entire period he contributed many papers on anatomy and allied subjects to scientific societies. He also reported frequently on various phases of medical history, a subject in which he took the greatest interest.

His anatomical papers dealt especially with the teaching of anatomy. He visualized anatomy as a living subject and used his knowledge of anthropology and embryology to emphasize its dynamic character. He founded the biological and anthropological societies of Washington, District of Columbia, served as president of the Association of American Anatomists, 1897, secretary of the Washington Academy of Science from 1890 to 1911 and edited the American Anthropologist from 1891 to 1898. He collaborated with Dr. John S. Billings in the Medical Dictionary (1890) and contributed the section on medical and anatomical terms in the Standard Dictionary (1890), as well as the anatomical article in Buck's Reference Handbook of the Medical Sciences. In 1889, he was appointed superintendent of the United States Life Saving Service and from 1890 to 1916 served as superintendent of the National Zoological Park, District of Columbia. He read a number of papers on medical history before the Johns Hopkins Medical Society and was one of the founders of the Medical History Club of Washington. His "History of Anatomy" in Stedman's Reference Handbook of the Medical Sciences (1913), I, 323-45, is one of the best accounts of the subject ever written. He collected a valuable library on anatomy, which was divided after his death between the library of the Surgeon-General's Office, Washington and the medical library of McGill University.

Baker's fine presence and his lively sense of humor made him a most popular teacher. His lectures to art schools were largely attended. He was a life-long friend of Walt Whitman and John Burroughs, all three having been in the government service together. By his confrères he was considered as "probably the most erudite physician in Washington." On September 13, 1873, he married Mary E. Cole of Sedgwick, Maine. His death occurred in Washington, September 30, 1918 and his widow and six children survived him.
Son of the American Revolution.
He was the grandson of Revolutionary Patriot Thomas Baker (1751-1840).

He was the son of Thomas C. Baker and Sybil Weed Baker.
On September 13, 1873, he married Mary E. Cole of Sedgwick, Maine.
They were the parents of seven children. including Margaret Delight Baker Willis (1874-1941).
--------------
Student, Scientist, Teacher.
Baker, Frank (August 22, 1841 - September 30, 1918), anatomist and historian, was born at Pulaski, New York, the son of Thomas and Sybil (Weed) Baker.

The following is from a merge with a duplicate memorial. It appears to have copied from Prabook. The website lists no source for the the following information.
His ancestors, who came from Gloucestershire, England, settled in New England and fought in the Revolutionary War.
In 1861, Baker enlisted in the 37th New York Volunteers, serving until 1863. He then entered the government service at Washington, District of Columbia. He was graduated with the degree of M.D. from Columbian (now George Washington) University in 1880.

After some years of practice in Washington, he became, in 1883, professor of anatomy in the Georgetown University School of Medicine, holding this chair continuously for thirty-five years until his death. During this entire period he contributed many papers on anatomy and allied subjects to scientific societies. He also reported frequently on various phases of medical history, a subject in which he took the greatest interest.

His anatomical papers dealt especially with the teaching of anatomy. He visualized anatomy as a living subject and used his knowledge of anthropology and embryology to emphasize its dynamic character. He founded the biological and anthropological societies of Washington, District of Columbia, served as president of the Association of American Anatomists, 1897, secretary of the Washington Academy of Science from 1890 to 1911 and edited the American Anthropologist from 1891 to 1898. He collaborated with Dr. John S. Billings in the Medical Dictionary (1890) and contributed the section on medical and anatomical terms in the Standard Dictionary (1890), as well as the anatomical article in Buck's Reference Handbook of the Medical Sciences. In 1889, he was appointed superintendent of the United States Life Saving Service and from 1890 to 1916 served as superintendent of the National Zoological Park, District of Columbia. He read a number of papers on medical history before the Johns Hopkins Medical Society and was one of the founders of the Medical History Club of Washington. His "History of Anatomy" in Stedman's Reference Handbook of the Medical Sciences (1913), I, 323-45, is one of the best accounts of the subject ever written. He collected a valuable library on anatomy, which was divided after his death between the library of the Surgeon-General's Office, Washington and the medical library of McGill University.

Baker's fine presence and his lively sense of humor made him a most popular teacher. His lectures to art schools were largely attended. He was a life-long friend of Walt Whitman and John Burroughs, all three having been in the government service together. By his confrères he was considered as "probably the most erudite physician in Washington." On September 13, 1873, he married Mary E. Cole of Sedgwick, Maine. His death occurred in Washington, September 30, 1918 and his widow and six children survived him.


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