Many look on the ‘Baker years’ as the transformation
of the Department in terms of research. A Structures Research Laboratory
was set up in 1944, where work on the plastic theory of structures
continued, together with research into residual stresses in welded
joints, brittle fracture and fatigue.
Baker Building South Wing, CUED
The site of the Welding Institute at Abington (now TWI), about 7 miles
south of Cambridge was bought in 1946 to accommodate this research into
welded structures, and Dr Richard Weck left the Department to become its
Director.
This can be considered the first ‘spin-off’ from the University, and
the start of what is now referred to as the Cambridge phenomenon.
Baker was made a fellow of the Royal Society in 1956, knighted in 1961
and made a life peer in 1977. He accumulated numerous academic honours
during his lifetime and joked in later years about whether he could acquire
gold medals faster than grandchildren.
Recommended Reading
Royal Society Biographical Memoirs. John Fleetwood Baker, Baron
Baker of Windrush. By J Heyman. 1985