Appointed a Life Governor of the
London Hospital in 1889, on 15 April 1890 he conducted the inquest into the death of the hospital's most famous resident,
Joseph Carey Merrick, the 'Elephant Man', who had died on 11 April 1890. Wynne Edwin Baxter was the last High Constable of Lewes, and became the town's first Mayor in 1881. The painting of Baxter as the first mayor of Lewes (as used at the top of this page), which hangs in the Assembly Room of
Lewes Town Hall, is an interesting one. He is shown with the red mayor's gown, the mayoral chain, the mace and the chair. However, these items had to be made and he only had them for the last week of his mayoralty. He was Clerk to the Lewes Provision Market, Governor of the Lewes Exhibition Fund, a member of the Committee of the Lewes National Schools, and a director of the Lewes Victoria Hospital. Between November 1914 and April 1916, during the First World War, Baxter conducted inquests into the deaths of eleven German
spies, including
Karl Lody, who had been captured in
Great Britain and tried and executed at the
Tower of London. On 13 June 1917 the Germans launched the first daylight air raid over London. 17
Gotha G biplanes were flown from
Belgium, dropping bombs on east London. 162 people were killed and a further 426 were injured during the raid, being the highest death toll from a single air raid on Britain during that war. On 15 June 1917 Baxter presided over the inquests of 20 of the victims at
Poplar. Baxter was a noted plant collector, a
Fellow of the
Geological Society of London and a Fellow and Treasurer of the
Royal Microscopical Society. He was fluent in French, and, in the 1890s, translated a number of scientific books from that language into English. Baxter was also an
antiquarian, having in his library 3,000 volumes concerning
Paradise Lost author
John Milton, many of them rare editions. He wrote and delivered academic papers on Milton. He was a member of the archaeological societies of Middlesex, Surrey, Kent, Sussex, and Gloucestershire. In addition, he was Clerk to two City Guilds, the
Worshipful Company of Shipwrights and the
Worshipful Company of Farriers. Moving to
Stoke Newington he served as Chairman of the Public Library Committee, Chairman of the Licensing Bench, and Manager of Barn Street School. He was a prominent
Freemason, being a member of the South Saxon Lodge No. 311. In 1907 Baxter said "I have held over 30,000 inquests, and have not had one body exhumed yet". Wynne Edwin Baxter died at his home at 170, Church Street,
Stoke Newington, in 1920, at the age of 76. He has a memorial against the east wall of the churchyard of All Saints Church in Lewes. ==Legacy==