Jim Baker was recruited by the
American Fur Company in 1839 for an 18-month expedition with
Jim Bridger to Wyoming. Baker returned briefly to his home in Illinois in 1841 but returned to the Rocky Mountains with the
Bidwell-Bartleson party, where he joined a trapping party on the Little Snake River. The party of 23 fought with about 500 Arapahos, Cheyenne and Sioux on August 21, 1841, losing three of their party and claiming 100 Native American casualties. Following the fight the trapping party retreated to Bridger's camp on the
Green River. Baker stayed in the west as a trapper until 1852, when he went on a trip with
Kit Carson. He also served as an interpreter and scout. He was one of the first permanent residents in the area of
Denver, Colorado, nominally living there from 1859 to 1871, although the residence was primarily inhabited by Baker's wife and family while he traveled. In 1873 Baker and his family moved to the Little Snake valley in Wyoming, where he remained until his death on May 15, 1898. == Preservation ==