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Lucy Margaret Baker

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Baker, Lucy Margaret
Personal details
Born1836
Died30 May 1909
ProfessionTeacher, missionary

Lucy Baker (1836 – 30 May 1909) was the first female teacher and missionary in present-day Prince Albert, Saskatchewan. She pioneered the development of the western Canadian settlement.

Life and career

Baker was born in Summertown, Glengarry County, Ontario, and raised from a young age by her aunt. She became a teacher shortly after finishing school in Fort Covington, New York.

Her teaching career was as varied as it was wide-ranging. She first worked in Dundee, then held classes in New Jersey for a women's school. She moved to New Orleans not long afterwards to co-own another women's school just before the American Civil War. In 1878, she returned to Glengarry County to teach a private school.

In 1879, minister Donald Ross asked Baker to teach at a missionary school in Prince Albert, on behalf of the Presbyterian church. She accepted the offer, and trekked cross-country to arrive at the western territory in 1879. She earned a permanent teaching grant at the mission school in 1880.

In 1890, Baker relocated to the Makoce Washte reserves in present-day South Dakota, where she served as chief instructor at a school for Sioux refugees. She learned to speak Sioux, and regularly spoke Mass in the refugees' native language. She remained teaching at Makoce Washte until her retirement in 1905.

References

  1. ^ "Lucy Margaret Baker fonds - SAIN Collections". Saskatchewan Archival Information Network. Retrieved 2015-09-15.
  2. "Biography - BAKER, LUCY MARGARET". Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Retrieved 2015-09-15.
  3. Byers, Elizabeth (1920). Lucy Margaret Baker: A Biographical Sketch of the First Missionary of Our Canadian Presbyterian Church to the North-West Indians. Toronto, Canada: Women's Missionary Society of the Presbyterian Church in Canada. p. 12.
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