William C. Baker
William Cotter Baker (March 15, 1858 โ 1931) was a lawyer and 20th mayor of Providence, Rhode Island. Early lifeWilliam Baker was born March 15, 1858, in Wickford, Rhode Island, to David S. Baker and Mary C. Baker.[3] He attended public schools, then East Greenwich Academy.[2] He received his A.B. (Bachelor's degree) from Brown University in 1881.[4][3][2] For two years he taught languages at Deveaux College in what was then the town of Suspension Bridge (now part of Niagara Falls, New York).[3] He was an Instructor of French and German.[4] In 1884 he received his A.M. (Master's degree) from Brown University.[4] In that same year he was admitted to the Rhode Island Bar and practiced law in Providence.[4] From 1884 to 1888, he was superintendent of public schools of North Kingstown.[3] On 24 May 1888 he married Sophia Metcalf, daughter of Jesse Metcalf of Providence.[3] By 1914, Baker was living in Pasadena, California.[5] While there, Baker published, together with his wife, a 60-page book of poems called "The Town where I was Born: Stories of Old Wickford."[6] Baker died in 1931.[7] Political lifeBaker was a member of Rhode Island state House of Representatives, 1892โ94, 1897-98.[5] He was elected to three terms as mayor of the City of Providence from 1898 to 1901. He ran as a Democrat on a good government reform platform, characterized by the Providence Journal as being "in opposition to the corporations."[8] The Journal also characterized Baker's low turnout elections as "boring".[9] References
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