I am going to assume you configured these on the Accelar as I would, and explain the IP numbering I would have used, in a further effort to get you to discuss the issue.
On the Accelar (presumably Spanning Tree 1, or Accelar 1, although I found that with more than 4 accelars this numbering broke down) I would have called the 1049 subnet 192.168.49.x and made the VLAN IP 192.168.49.1, while in the 1043 VLAN was 192.168.43.x and the VLAN IP was 192.168.43.1 and so forth
The management VLAN would be 192.168.0.x and the accelars VLAN IP would be 192.168.0.1, the baystacks would then be 192.168.0.10 to 192.168.0.250 you would be having trouble pinging 192.168.0.37 say, although you could ping 192.168.0.1 (the accelar) and perhaps even other baystacks (192.168.0.25, say)
With the Accelar 1200's the router's IP cannot be pinged unless you have link to at least one other device in the subnet, if you cannot ping even the accelars Management VLAN IP, (192.168.0..1 in my example) you may need to put one end user device in that subnet hooked to the Accelar, to bootstrap this. it should not be needed once the baystacks work.
If the Management VLAN is VLAN 1 but the IP address of the stack is NOT in the same subnet as the accelar's Management IP then you need to give the Baystack a Management IP in the Management VLAN.
If you did not give the accelar a IP in the Management VLAN, then it cannot route from any other VLAN. (in this scenario you would be able to ping Baystacks from each other, but not from the PCs)
I tried to remain child-like, all I acheived was childish.