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Hazel Baker Denton |
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At a glance:
Biography:
Hazel was the tenth and last child of Utah Pioneer parents, William George Baker and Nicoline Marie Bertelson-Baker (French, Scotch, and English blood through her father; Danish through her Mother.) The French child who grew up to become her great-grandmother was an infant during the time of the French Revolution. Her parents, who lived in Paris, France, were on the "wrong side of the fence," and were sacrificed during the Reign of Terror. Her great grandmother was saved by a faithful servant who placed the baby girl in a wine casque and managed an escape with her across the Channel to England. The little girl grew up in England under the protection of her benefactor and moved later to Scotland where she married a Scot whose last name was Griffiths. One of her daughters, Jean Rio Griffiths, who became Hazel's grandmother, left Scotland to live in England with the English gentleman she had married, Henry Baker. One of their children was William G. Baker, later to be Hazel's father. When Henry Baker died in London, Jean Rio Griffiths-Baker became a convert to the Mormon Church. She kept a day-to-day diary of her journey to Salt Lake City from the day she left her London home ("near St. Paul's Cathedral," my father used to tell me) on January 4, 1851 until she reached Salt Lake City in September of that year. She remained in Utah for eighteen years, then moved to San Francisco, California, where four of her sons had preceded her. Her last Journal entry is dated August, 1875. Hazel wrote that her mother's parents were also converted to the L.D.S. religion. They sent their children to Utah from Aalborg, Denmark, before arriving themselves. According to Hazel,
"My mother was sent alone when she was seven. The friends who brought her to America left her at St. Louis, Missouri with a nice family who employed her as nurse-maid, taught her to speak, read, and write English, and paid her a small wage, out of which she saved enough in two years to pay her fare on the river boat up to Council Bluffs, Iowa. From there she walked most of the way to Utah beside the covered wagon trains.
Hazel Baker was married at Caliente on December 28, 1916 to Floyd Howard Denton, a native of Nebraska. She continued teaching until the first of four children was born in October, 1917, followed by three others in 1919, 1923, and 1925. However, she and her husband "became intimate with sorrow in the loss of two lovely little girls - Henrietta Marie at two years, Betty Jeanne at three." In 1922 Hazel was elected a member of the Lincoln County Board of Education and in 1928 she resumed teaching in Caliente with the unusual distinction of being both a teacher and President of the Board of Education at that time. Again, from Hazel's writings:
Hazel Denton was one of the few Nevada women profiled in a 1935 history by James A. Scrugham, Nevada: A Narrative of the Conquest of a Frontier Land. Scrugham described Hazel as "an unusually well read and informed woman in the field of politics and economics, and like so many students of world affairs in these days, she is inclined to liberal, internationalistic and socialistic views." With the Nevada Federation of Women's Clubs, Hazel served as state chairman of child welfare, state chairman of library extension, President of the First District, NFWC, for the term 1932-34 and State President during 1944-46. Hazel was also a charter member and first President of the Caliente Business and Professional Women's Club, organized in 1941. Always active in education, she was President of the Lincoln County Classroom Teachers in 1948-49 and Treasurer of the Nevada State Classroom Teachers during the same years. In 1952 Hazel Denton was elected as a Democrat to the Nevada Assembly and was re-elected in 1954. Maude Frazier, a Democrat from Clark County, also served during those same years and Republican Mabel Isbell of Washoe County joined them in the Assembly for the 1955 Session. While in the Assembly, Denton introduced several bills and resolutions aimed at improving the status of free public libraries and state parks. Hazel's journalistic and literary leanings began in 1937 with a regular column in the Caliente newspaper; it was signed JMR in memory of her grandmother, Jean Marie Rio. Another regular feature in the paper by Hazel was "While the Toast Burns," carried in 1951-52. Both poems and paragraphs from these years of writing were included in her book, Ironing Day, published in 1955 by Exposition Press of New York. The book's cover indicated: "Although she is a teacher, clubwoman, newspaper columnist, and member of the Nevada Legislature, Hazel Baker Denton classifies herself as a housewife who does her own ironing. It's while ironing, she says, that most of the ideas for her poems and essays run through her head - hence, the title Ironing Day." Hazel Denton died in Las Vegas on January 30, 1962. Services were held in Caliente with Bishop Wesley Holt of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints officiating. Governor Grant Sawyer delivered the eulogy, and burial was in the Caliente cemetery. (Biographical sketch by Jean Ford)
Published Works:
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