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Excerpt from Past and Present of Lucas and Wayne Counties, Iowa, Vol. 2: A Record of Settlement, Organization, Progress and Achievement The common schools of Lucas afford-cd Norman F. Baker his educational opportunities, but he has carried forward his own studies since that time, being an apt pupil in the school of experience. Since 1886 he has been connected with the affairs of the Farmers Miners Bank, established in that year, an institution of which he is now cashier. A financier of shrewd and resource ful ability, he has by the application of sound and progressive methods made the concern grow and expand so that it is now not only the oldest bank in the county but also one of the substantial and prosperous financial concerns of the state. Mr. Baker is progressive and modern in all that he does and his spirit of enterprise is evidenced by the fact that he will allow in the bank only the newest equipment, having recently installed a new burglar proof manganese safe, of the Victor patent, one of the first to be introduced in southern Iowa. In addition to his banking interests Mr. Baker owns also a. Profitable general mer chandise store in Lucas and two good farms in Jackson township, each of which is provided with an excellent set of improvements. Following his father's foot steps, he has ever taken an active part in the development of Lucas, centering a great deal of his attention upon its growth along business lines and making his individual prosperity a factor in general expansion. Mr. Baker married, in October, 1896, Miss Margaret Beatty, born in Wapello county, Iowa, June 4, 1874. She is a daughter of Thomas and Mary (hart) Beatty, the former born in Dubuque in 1848 and the latter near Sheldon, Iowa, December 25, 1852. When Mrs. Baker was two years of age her parents removed to Lucas county, where both died, the father passing away in 1880 and the mother in April, 1900. In their family were five children: Mrs. Ella Jones, the wife of the Chicago, Burlington Quincy Railway agent at Indianola, Iowa, Mrs. Baker; James, who is engaged in the mercantile business in Ottumwa; Mrs. Mary Warner, whose husband is also a merchant in Albia, Iowa; and Susan, the wife of Arthur Knotts, interested in mining in old Mexico. The two eldest children in this family are natives of Wapello county, the three younger ones having been born in Lucas county. The family has been in Iowa since pioneer times, Mrs. Baker's grandparents having been among the earliest settlers in Dubuque county. Mr. And Mrs. Baker have two sons: Norman F Jr., born December 29, 1897, now a student in the public schools; and Gerald J. Whose birth occurred April 19, 1900, and who is also pursuing his studies. Mrs. Baker 18 a member of the Catholic church of Chariton. About the Publisher Forgotten Books publishes hundreds of thousands of rare and classic books. Find more at www.forgottenbooks.com This book is a reproduction of an important historical work. Forgotten Books uses state-of-the-art technology to digitally reconstruct the work, preserving the original format whilst repairing imperfections present in the aged copy. In rare cases, an imperfection in the original, such as a blemish or missing page, may be replicated in our edition. We do, however, repair the vast majority of imperfections successfully; any imperfections that remain are intentionally left to preserve the state of such historical works.
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