The
Baker House, at 5744 Moog Road in Elfers, is the oldest cracker house
in western Pasco County. It has been restored as a museum
and is open to the public on Saturdays from 1 to 4 p.m. in October
through May. Arrangements for group tours
can be made by calling 727 868-2750 or 727 849-2131. The house is
located adjacent to Centennial Park Library. Elfers is near
Holiday and New Port Richey.
Samuel
Baker (1849-1898) was born in Florida on Dec. 6, 1849. He married
Elizabeth Pinder (b. Bahamas, Jan. 30, 1849; d., Aug. 30, 1910) in Key
West on April 9, 1866.
They moved to Bailey's Bluff in 1880 and established a grocery store
there.
On May 19, 1880, he bought 40 acres of land, for one dollar per acre,
so that he could
add a citrus grove to his already thriving sponge business based at
nearby Baillie's Bluff.
In 1882 he built this home on the property.
The photo at left shows Mrs. Baker; no photo of Mr. Baker is known to
exist.
The method of joinery used at the Baker House is an amalgamation of "country carpentry" and the skills of a shipwright.
The structural framing of the house form the first floor supports to the
top wall plates are half-lapped and pegged. The walls are formed with vertically placed boards but joined, and the
joints are covered with a molded batten on both the interior and exterior. The only
studs in the walls are in the door and window openings. The wall boards are book matched beginnings at the
center point of the end walls. The placement of all doors and windows is completely symmetrical. The support
for the attic floor framing and the roof rafters (top of wall plates) is accomplished by securing the
framing to the wall boards with nails installed from the exterior. Again, there are no wall studs to support
the framing.
The house has a central hall called a "dogtrot." The kitchen of a cracker house was always a separate building.
Since the original kitchen east of the house itself was torn down many years ago, it has been necessary to build a separate
kitchen southwest of the house, approached by the west porch.
The privy has also been replaced by one in the northwest corner of the yard.
Samuel Baker died on Aug. 12, 1898. In 1910, the property was purchased by a Philadelphia banker named Gribbel.
In 1937 it was purchased by Charles B. Anderson (died, 1943), who built a two-story house about 50 yards to the east,
and the pair was known as the Anderson-Baker house.
During the 1980s, the Pasco Board of County Commissioners bought the property from Anderson's granddaughter
and renamed the site Centennial Park. The Anderson house became the headquarters of the Pasco Fine Arts Council.
In 1989 the St. Petersburg Times reported that the Baker House Restoration Project was organized to
raise money to restore the house. The co-chairpersons were Mary C. Vinson and Ann Hildebrand. Others
were Arlene Niles, secretary; Clara Baker, treasurer; Agnes Warnke, historian; Gordon Baker, Maxine Clayton,
Louise Meichner, and Lillian Toll, directors.
The restoration was directed by restoration architect John Parks,
who was helped in his effort to establish the home's
original design by Ella Mae Hay Patterson, who visited
frequently in the 1890s and could recall
details about how the house was arranged. She recalled
that the south room on the first floor was known as the
library, where she would rush
to read books whenever her parents brought her to visit.
(Mrs. Patterson, then living in Tarpon Springs, died at age 102 on March 1, 1994. She was
a school teacher for 49 years in the Pinellas County school system.)
The dedication of the restored Baker house was held on Feb. 13, 1993.
The Charles B. Anderson house was listed in the National Register of Historic Places on April 26, 1996.
The Baker House was listed in the National Register of Historic Places on Feb. 14, 1997.
A Yahoo Group for the Baker family was created in 2008. If you believe you are connected to the family, you can send
an email to ask to join the group to
DesSamElizBaker-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
You can also send email there to request more information about the family.