William Baker III of Fenton

25 November 1771 (baptised) to 1833

 

 

 

 

 

 

BAK00106

 

 

 

  

Home Page

The home page of the Farndale family website of which this section is a part

Baker Home Page

The Home page of the Baker family part of the website

The Baker Directory

The Baker Family directory

Baker History

Notes on the Baker family history

The Baker Family Tree

The Baker Family Tree, which is the best way to search the family history

General Sir Martin Farndale KCB

 

Headlines of William Baker III’s life are in brown.

Dates are in red.

Hyperlinks to other pages are in dark blue.

References and citations are in turquoise.

Context and local history are in purple.

 

1771

 

William Baker was the son of William and Sarah (nee Bagnall) Baker (FAR00084). He was born in 1771 and baptised at Fulford, Staffordshire on 25 November 1771.

 

William Baker II’s widow Sarah later remarried on 21 December 1793 to Ralph Bourne (d. 1835) of Hilderstone Hall, Staffordshire, with whom she had a further family. Ralph Bourne was a man of consequence, who was also a Deputy Lieutenant and a Justice of the Peace, who lived at Hilderstone Hall. Ralph’s father, James Bourne had come to the area to join the pottery industry. Ralph Bourne was a potter and a philanthropist. Ralph became partners with his step son, the third William Baker and they traded as Bourne and Baker. The business made staple products and exported them on a considerable scale. It was later said that unglazed clayware was exported to Africa. The business flourished and by 1829, they had expanded to a second factory and acquired a flint mill. A History of Stoke on Trent by Ward referred to very extensive earthenware manufactories, which for many years were carried on by the firm of Bourne, Baker and Bourne (Ralph’s brother John had also joined the business) and raised the proprietors to the first rank among the preeminent and opulent potters who flourished during the by-gone portion of the [nineteenth] century.

 

William Baker III, with his step father, Ralph Bourne, built themselves  houses near to the new factories. Simeon Shaw in Staffordshire Potteries refers to them as spacious mansions which were square houses with hipped roofs. “Mr Baker’s was spacious and commodious surrounded with gardens and pleasure grounds and enjoying a tolerably extensive prospect.” It became known as Fenton House and continued to be occupied by the family until the end of the nineteenth century. The house still existed in 1960, but has since been demolished.

 

William Baker III was described as being of Doveridge Woodhouse in Derbyshire and Moorville, Caverswall, as well as Fenton House. These were probably retreats away from the Fenton factories.

 

1794

 

William Baker III, a potter, married Molly Bourne (born 1773), the youngest sister of his stepfather, on 12 October 1794. They had ten children.

 

A screenshot of a computer screen

Description automatically generated

 

1798

 

William III was appointed to be a Deputy Lord Lieutenant and JP and in 1798, he joined the Staffordshire Volunteer Cavalry. The unit had been formed by Josiah Spode when Napoleon threatened to invade Britain, and William was a Cornet, or fifth commissioned officer.

 

1833

 

William Baker II died in 1833, and his partner, John Bourne, died the same year.