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Ronald Baker fonds
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- Textual record
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- Source of title proper: Title based on the provenance of the fonds.
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2 folders of textual records.
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Biographical history
Ronald "Ron" James Baker was the first faculty member hired by President Patrick McTaggart-Cowan for the new Simon Fraser University (SFU) in 1964. Baker served as the University's Director of Academic Planning and as the first head of the English Department. He remained at SFU until 1969 when he was appointed the first president of the new University of Prince Edward Island.
Baker was born in London, England, on August 24, 1924, to James "Jim" Herbert Walter and Ethel Frances Baker (née Miller). He served with the Royal Air Force (1943-1947), during which he trained in Manitoba. After the war, in 1947, he immigrated to Canada.
He married Helen "Jo" Gillespie Elder [ca. 1947]; they would have five children (Sharon Ann, Lynn Frances, Ian James, Sarah Jane, and Katherine Jean). In 1975, he married Frances Marilyn Frazer (1932-2010), with whom he had one son, Ralph Edward "Ted."
Baker graduated from the University of British Columbia (UBC) with a Bachelor of Arts in 1951 and a Master of Arts in 1953, both in English. He went on to do graduate work in the School of Oriental and African Studies at the University of London (1954-1956). Baker had lectured in English during his undergraduate degree at UBC and returned to the University to become an associate professor in 1962. While at UBC, Baker was involved in the production of John B. Macdonald's report, Higher Education in British Columbia and a Plan for the Future (1962), which led directly to the development of a second university (SFU) in the Lower Mainland.
In 1964, Baker became the first faculty member of President Patrick McTaggart-Cowan for the newly created SFU. Baker served as University's Director of Academic Planning and as the first head of the English Department. He remained at SFU until 1969 when he was appointed the first president of the new University of Prince Edward Island (1969-1978). He continued to teach there as a professor until 1991, when he retired.
He served on numerous councils and committees throughout his career, including the Canadian Association of University Teachers (1954-1969), the Royal Society of Arts (Fellow, 1971-1990), the Royal Commonwealth Society (1964-1966), the National Defence Strategic Studies Committee (Chairman, 1986-1998), the Canadian Executive Service Organization (CESO) (Volunteer Advisor to First Nations Groups, 1988-2004), and the Canadian Citizen Court (Presiding Officer, 1996-2004).
Baker was made an Officer of the Order of Canada (1978) and received numerous awards and honours, including the Queen's Silver Jubilee Medal (1977), a Canada 125th Medal (1992), and Queen's Golden Jubilee Medal (2002). He also received honorary law degrees from the University of New Brunswick (1970), Mount Allison University (1977), University of Prince Edward Island (1989), and Simon Fraser University (1990).
Custodial history
Most of these materials were received by Ronald Baker from Roy Daniells, or acquired from other sources, and returned by Baker to Laurenda Daniells after Roy’s death and donated to University Archives by Laurenda Daniells in 1994.
Scope and content
Fonds consists primarily of correspondence between Ronald Baker and Roy Daniells. There is also some correspondence between Baker and Laurenda Daniells. Also included is a selection of poems and other verses, written by Daniells and collected by Baker. Materials are in two file folders.
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Stored with University Archives’ vertical files as VF 110 (a) and (b).
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Name access points
- Daniells, Roy (Subject)
- Simon Fraser University. Academic Planning Office (Subject)
- Simon Fraser University. Dept. of English (Subject)
- Daniells, Laurenda (Subject)