Home / Trending / May 8 – Happy Birthday, Henry Baker

May 8 – Happy Birthday, Henry Baker

Posted on May 8, 2021


This is an update of my post published on Mary 8, 2010:

On this day in 1698, Henry Baker was born in London, England.

 He is known for three things:

(1) Baker developed a new way to teach the hearing- and speech-impaired (known then as “the deaf and dumb”). He was able to make a lot of money with his system – which he kept strictly secret.


(2) Baker was the son-in-law of the writer Daniel Defoe. Defoe wrote a lot of things, but nowadays he is most famous for the book Robinson Crusoe, which is considered by many to be the first novel written in English.

(Why only considered the first novel by many, and not all? Because different scholars have different definitions of the word novel.)

Robinson Crusoe is a castaway on a remote tropical island who meets Native Americans and mutineers and has all sorts of adventures before finally being rescued—28 years later!

Baker used Defoe’s name and fame when he launched a weekly publication filled with essays; it was called the Universal Spectator and Weekly Journal, and it ran about 18 years, with more than 900 issues.

 

(3) Baker introduced the microscope to the general public with several publications, including The Microscope Made Easy.

Science popularizers are important because they increase interest in and understanding of science in the general population, and THAT often encourages young people to study science. 

Also, Baker won a medal for his microscopical observations of salt crystals.

Baker’s interests were varied. We can celebrate him by trying a variety of activities ourselves.

(1) Have you ever wanted to learn sign language? ASL (American Sign Language) and BSL (British Sign Language) are complete languages, each with its own grammar.

 

(By the way, the two languages are quite different.)

Here are some resources to try them out: an ASL video dictionary and text dictionary …and ASL lessons here and here.

For BSL: an introductory videoshort dictionary and resources.

 

(2) Here is a super short summary of Robinson Crusoe. And here is the complete version, free online. WARNING: like many old books, this book is horribly racist.

What would you do if you were shipwrecked? Write a story. Maybe you can get rescued in 28 days, rather than 28 years!


(3) Play a “guess what it is?” with microscopic looks at ordinary items. 

If you have a microscope, look at all sorts of things from a human hair to a drop of pond water, from a thread to a leaf.

Above, a human hair; below, wing of a fly 

Above, pond water; below, plant cells

If you don’t have access to a microscope, check out this virtual microscope website.

Here‘s a virtual electron scanning microscope.

Above, butterfly scales; below, an ant’s head

 


Also on this date:



Fête de la Victoire in St. Pierre & Miquelon







Red Cross and Red Crescent Day  






Naturalist Sir David Attenborough’s birthday





Furry Dance in Helston, England



Cigar mogul and theater patron Oscar Hammerstein’s birthday


Liberation of the Republic in Slovakia




Birthday of U.S. President Truman





Parents’ Day in South Korea











V-E Day








Windmill Day
(Second Saturday in May)





National Archery Day

(Second Saturday in May)




National Miniature Golf Day
(Second Saturday in May)





World Belly Dance Day
(Second Saturday in May)






Plan ahead:


Check out my Pinterest boards for:
  • May holidays 
  • May birthdays 
  • Historical anniversaries in May

And here are my Pinterest boards for:

  • June holidays
  • June birthdays
  • Historical anniversaries in June

n

See also  July 12 - Different Colored Eyes Day
Share on:

You May Also Like

More Trending

Leave a Comment