For a period, Baker served as publisher of a weekly newspaper in
Huntsville, Tennessee, the county seat of Scott County. In 1928, he was
elected to a term in the
Tennessee House of Representatives, and served on the Scott County
Board of Education from 1931 to 1932. In 1934, he became
district attorney general of the former 19th Judicial Circuit, serving until 1938 in that capacity. In 1938, Baker made an unsuccessful bid for
governor of Tennessee, losing in the general election to Democrat
Prentice Cooper. In 1940, he ran unsuccessfully for the
United States Senate, losing to Democrat
Kenneth McKellar. He was a delegate to the
Republican National Convention in 1940, 1948, 1952, and 1956. He was
vice president and general counsel to the former
Oneida and Western Railroad in 1945, and was also on the
board of directors of the First National Bank of
Oneida. Baker was elected to the
82nd and to the six succeeding Congresses and served from January 3, 1951, until his death from a heart attack in
Knoxville, Tennessee on January 7, 1964. He was succeeded in office by his widow
Irene, but did not vote on the
Civil Rights Act of 1957. == Death ==