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John R. Baker

Birth
Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania, USA
Death
21 Dec 1850
Burial
Buried or Lost at Sea Add to Map
Memorial ID
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On board steamer Northerner, during her passage from Panama to this port (New York City), 21st of December (1850) John R. Baker.—Also, on the 23d of December, his wife, Sarah Anne Baker, both of the isthmus fever. The former was a native of Philadelphia, the latter of Troy, but for the last eighteen years residents of New Orleans. “The Evening Post”, New York, New York, Friday, 7 March 1851, p. 2

"The Times-Picayune", New Orleans, Louisiana, on 15 February 1851, reported "Husband, wife, the fond father and mother, now lie in the cold embrace of the Pacific, leaving in a strange land two children and many friends to mourn their loss. Mr. and Mrs. Baker leave, also, children and friends in New Orleans.
On board steamer Northerner, during her passage from Panama to this port (New York City), 21st of December (1850) John R. Baker.—Also, on the 23d of December, his wife, Sarah Anne Baker, both of the isthmus fever. The former was a native of Philadelphia, the latter of Troy, but for the last eighteen years residents of New Orleans. “The Evening Post”, New York, New York, Friday, 7 March 1851, p. 2

"The Times-Picayune", New Orleans, Louisiana, on 15 February 1851, reported "Husband, wife, the fond father and mother, now lie in the cold embrace of the Pacific, leaving in a strange land two children and many friends to mourn their loss. Mr. and Mrs. Baker leave, also, children and friends in New Orleans.

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