99,406 research outputs found

    Letter: Morris L. Cooke to Ida M. Tarbell, March 2, 1921

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    Letter with letter of Morris L. Cooke to Edwin F. Gay, Mrch 2, 192

    Letter: Morris L. Cooke to Ida M. Tarbell, March 2, 1921

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    Letter with letter of Morris L. Cooke to Edwin F. Gay, Mrch 2, 192

    George F. Cooke as Richard III

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    George F. Cooke as Richard III. English actor Cooke was as famous for his erratic habits as for his acting, he was largely responsible for initiating the romantic style in acting that was later made famous by Edmund Kean

    George F. Cooke as Richard III

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    George F. Cooke as Richard III, painting by Thomas Sully. English actor Cooke was as famous for his erratic habits as for his acting, he was largely responsible for initiating the romantic style in acting that was later made famous by Edmund Kean

    George F. Cooke as Iago

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    George Frederick Cooke in the Character of Iago. English actor Cooke was as famous for his erratic habits as for his acting, he was largely responsible for initiating the romantic style in acting that was later made famous by Edmund Kean

    New York, New York 1890

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    "The property coloured yellow laid out into lots August 16th, 1833 for Jas. L. Curtis - by Joseph F. Bridges, C.S." "New York May 28th 1831, the property was divided and the papers executed agreeable to this map, Joseph F. Bridges." "Original in possession of R. D. Cooke, No. 19 Centre Street, Near Chambers St, New York October 1890."Color

    Woman's portrait photograph

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    This image is a photograph of a cabinet card portrait of a woman. The cabinet card was propped against a rail or post before the photograph was taken. The unidentified woman in the cabinet card portrait is wearing a square-necked dress or blouse. Her hair is pinned back, but a loose curl hangs down the back of her neck. The photographer may have been Reverend Henry E. Cooke (1857-1915), son of the prominent American banker and financier Jay Cooke (1821-1905). Henry E. Cooke acted as his family's historian and photographer. He created or compiled poetry, sketches, humorous anecdotes, and several thousand photographs that documented three generations of the Cooke family. Henry E. Cooke graduated from Princeton and had his first posting at Trinity Church in Manchester, New Hampshire. He later became the head of the Episcopal Church in San Francisco. After only a year, he returned to Ohio and eventually became head of the Church in Cleveland, Ohio. He married Esther Clarkson Russell (1863-1945) and had two children, Henry Eleutheros Cooke (Harry) and Russell Cooke. Gilbert & Bacon, the portrait studio established by Philadelphia photographers Charles M. Gilbert (b. ca. 1848) and William F. Bacon (ca. 1843-1900), operated ca. 1874-ca. 1929. The firm specialized in celebrity portraiture and photographed actors, baseball players, and members of high society. Following the death of Bacon in 1900, the firm continued in business under the management of Gilbert and Bacon's son Frank T. into the early 20th century

    Hiona Cooke

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    <i>Hiona</i> Cooke in Baker, 1940 <p> Type species <i>Microcystis platyla</i> Ancey, 1889 (OD). Oahu, Hawaii.</p>Published as part of <i>Hyman, Isabel T. & Ponder, Winston F., 2010, A morphological phylogenetic analysis and generic revision of Australian Helicarionidae (Gastropoda: Pulmonata: Stylommatophora), and an assessment of the relationships of the family 2462, pp. 1-148 in Zootaxa 2462 (1)</i> on page 112, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.2462.1.1, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/5312710">http://zenodo.org/record/5312710</a&gt

    South west view of Salisbury Cathedral

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    'S. W. VIEW OF SALISBURY CATHEDRAL. Drawn by F. Nash. Engraved by George Cooke. Published 1814, by W. Dodswth, Close, Salisbury, Messrs. Brodie and Dowding, Salisbury, Mr. Murray, Albermarle Street, & Messrs. Cadell & Davies, Strand, London.

    [Letter from D. F. Prince to Felix H. Morales - April 18, 1949]

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    A letter from D. F. Prince to Felix H. Morales, informing Morales that a conflicting application has been filed by John F. Cooke. Prince suggests that Morales contact Cooke and inquire about the possibility of Cooke withdrawing his application. Prince cautions Morales not to offer Cooke money to withdraw or to reimburse him for expenses. The letter also contains a brief summary of the application filed by Cooke for a radio station in Houston, Texas on April 15, 1949
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