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Cooke and Hesiod
* Hesiod, Works and Days Book 1 Works and Days Book 2 Works and Days Book 3 Translated from the Greek by Mr. Cooke ( London, 1728 ).
* December 29-Thomas Cooke, first translator of Hesiod into English ( born 1703 )
** Thomas Cooke, translator of Hesiod ( died 1756 )

Cooke and Works
* Northern Pacific 2 a rotary steam snowplow built by the Cooke Locomotive Works in 1887, is currently owned by the Lake Superior Railroad Museum and is on display in Duluth, Minnesota.
* Central Pacific No. 3 / Southern Pacific No. 1 C. P. Huntington-Cosmetically restored, a 4-2-4RT type built by Cooke Locomotive Works in 1863.
The Cooke Locomotive and Machine Works, located in Paterson, New Jersey, manufactured steam railroad locomotives from 1852 until it was merged with seven other manufacturers to form American Locomotive Company ( ALCO ) in 1901.
In 1901, Cooke and several other locomotive manufacturers are merged to form the American Locomotive Company ; Cooke's plant becomes the Alco-Cooke Works.
# REDIRECT Cooke Locomotive and Machine Works
John Cooke ( 1824 – 1882 ) was one of the principals of Cooke Locomotive Works, one of the constituent companies that made up American Locomotive Company in the merger of 1901.
After Cooke's death in 1882, his company, by that time renamed to Cooke Locomotive Works, became one of the constituent companies that made up the American Locomotive Company in the merger of 1901.
Leslie Brothers contracted with Cooke Locomotive & Machine Works in Paterson to do the actual construction.
* John Cooke, founder of American steam locomotive manufacturing company Cooke Locomotive Works ( d. 1882 ).
* John Cooke steps down from the superintendent position at Rogers Locomotive and Machine Works to partner with Charles Danforth in forming the new locomotive manufacturing company, Danforth, Cooke and Company in Paterson, New Jersey.
* John Cooke, superintendent of Rogers Locomotive and Machine Works and founder of Cooke Locomotive Works ( b. 1824 ).
* John Cooke, future founder of Cooke Locomotive Works, is promoted to superintendent at American steam locomotive manufacturing company Rogers Locomotive and Machine Works.

Cooke and Days
Cooke ordered an ill-fated charge of the 5th U. S. Cavalry at Gaines ' Mill during the Seven Days Battles, sacrificing nearly an entire regiment of regulars.

Cooke and from
More contemporary renditions include samples from such popular artists as Sam Cooke and The Soul Stirrers ( 1963 ), The Byrds ( 1970 ), Elvis Presley ( 1971 ), Skeeter Davis ( 1972 ), Mighty Clouds of Joy ( 1972 ), Amazing Rhythm Aces ( 1975 ), Willie Nelson ( 1976 ), and The Lemonheads ( 1992 ).
The doughnut claim has since been repeated by media such as the BBC ( by Alistair Cooke in his Letter from America program ), The Guardian, MSNBC, CNN, Time magazine, and The New York Times ; mentioned in several books about Germany written by English-speaking authors, including Norman Davies and Kenneth C. Davis ; and used in the manual for the Speech Synthesis Markup Language.
His men met no serious opposition from the more decentralized Union cavalry, coincidentally commanded by his father-in-law, Col. Cooke.
The language was developed beginning in 1955 by Dr James Cooke Brown with the goal of making a language so different from natural languages that people learning it would think in a different way if the hypothesis were true.
Although a small number of Rickenbacker acoustics were sold in the 1950s and were seen in the hands of stars like Ricky Nelson and Sam Cooke, the company concentrated on their electric guitar and western steel guitar business from the early 1960s onward.
Then in the offseason, Redskins majority owner Jack Kent Cooke moved from Los Angeles to Virginia and took over the team's day-by-day operations from Edward Bennett Williams.
After two seasons, John Kent Cooke was unable to raise sufficient funds to permanently purchase the Redskins, and on May 25, 1999, Daniel Snyder gained unanimous approval ( 31 – 0 ) from league owners and bought the franchise for $ 800 million, a deal that was the most expensive team-purchasing deal in sporting history.
As Cooke writes, " In spite of continued opposition and criticism, and many well-meaning exhortations to caution from his friends, he looked neither to right nor left, but simply got down to work on the next symphony.
In October 2003 a successful stage show called Round the Horne ... Revisited opened in London, compiled by Series Four co-writer Brian Cooke from original scripts, and ran until April 2005 – also siring three nationwide tours and a BBC television film.
It was presented by Jonathan James-Moore and included interviews with Ron Moody, Bill Pertwee, Eric Merriman's son Andy, Brian Cooke, Barry Took's ex-wife Lyn, and extracts from Kenneth Williams's diary read " in character " by David Benson.
Based on the original radio scripts, it was adapted by Brian Cooke, the last surviving writer from the series, and directed by Michael Kingsbury.
The act specified the " county town " be named " Cookeville " in honor of Richard F. Cooke, who served in the Tennessee Senate from 1851 – 1854, representing at various times Jackson, Fentress, Macon, Overton and White Counties.
Another operatic version came in 1828, when Frederic Reynolds adapted Garrick's Catherine and Petruchio, adding an overture by Rossini and songs from Shakespeare's plays and sonnets set to music by tenor John Braham and T. Cooke.
Short insisted the deal be conducted in cash as he was wary of Cooke, so guards transported the money in a cart from one New York bank to another.
They get extra help from a Native American biker named Dakota ( Keith Cooke ), whose mother ( Judy Kotok ) was murdered by Sommers.
Engraving of interior of Brunel's train-shed from c1843, by John Cooke Bourne.
Konnie Huq and Matt Cooke from BBC TV present the Your News programme from Neasden: news. bbc. co. uk ( originally broadcast on 27 September 2008 ).
The interior of Brunel's train-shed at Temple Meads, the first Bristol terminus of the GWR, from an engraving by John Cooke Bourne | J. C. Bourne.
It was founded around 1620 when the townlands in the area were leased by an English ecclesiastical lawyer, Dr. Alan Cooke, from the Archbishop of Armagh, who had been granted the lands after the Flight of the Earls.
However, several other officers of the Seventh, including William Cooke and Tom Custer, were also dressed in buckskin on the day of the battle, and the fact that each of the non-mutilation wounds to Custer's body ( a bullet wound below the heart and a shot to the left temple ) would have been instantly fatal casts doubt on his being wounded or killed at the ford, more than a mile from where his body was found.
General Cooke was a cavalry officer whose military career spanned almost half a century, beginning with his graduation from West Point in 1827 to his retirement in 1873.

Cooke and Greek
In 1792 the Regius Greek Professorship at Cambridge became vacant by the resignation of William Cooke.
Cooke is particularly remembered because he educated his daughters, who were taught both Latin and Greek.

Cooke and London
Bacon was born on 22 January 1561 at York House near the Strand in London, the son of Sir Nicholas Bacon by his second wife Anne ( Cooke ) Bacon, the daughter of noted humanist Anthony Cooke.
From around 1810 to 1840, the best-known Shakespearean performances in the United States were tours by leading London actors — including George Frederick Cooke, Junius Brutus Booth, Edmund Kean, William Charles Macready, and Charles Kemble.
* 1837 – The first commercial use of an electrical telegraph is successfully demonstrated by William Cooke and Charles Wheatstone on July 25, 1837 between Euston and Camden Town in London.
Morse then traveled to Europe seeking both sponsorship and patents, but in London discovered that Cooke and Wheatstone had already established priority.
It was patented in the United Kingdom in 1837, and was first successfully demonstrated by Cooke and Wheatstone on 25 July 1837 between Euston and Camden Town in London.
In October 1660, at Charing Cross or Tyburn, London, ten were publicly hanged, drawn and quartered: Thomas Harrison, John Jones, Adrian Scroope, John Carew, Thomas Scot, and Gregory Clement, who had signed the king's death warrant ; the preacher Hugh Peters ; Francis Hacker and Daniel Axtell, who commanded the guards at the king's trial and execution ; and John Cooke, the solicitor who directed the prosecution.
Cooke was also London correspondent for NBC.
Shortly after emigrating, Cooke suggested to the BBC the idea of doing the London Letter in reverse: a 15-minute talk for British listeners on life in America.
* Alistair Cooke's America ( 22 Nov 1973 ) BBC Books, London ISBN 0-563-12182-3 ; ( 13 Nov 2003 ) Phoenix ISBN 1-84188-229-1-updated edition with new introduction and final chapter written by Alistair Cooke
Gallery, London, text by Lynne Cooke
Cooke and Wheatstone patented it in May 1837 as an alarm system, and it was first successfully demonstrated on 25 July 1837 between Euston and Camden Town in London.
The original, incomplete Cooke version was first recorded by the BBC as noted above ; the first complete version ( denoted Cooke I ) was also premièred by Goldschmidt, this time with the London Symphony Orchestra in 1964 ; the first commercial recording appeared in 1966 ( recording date: 1965 ), conducted by Eugene Ormandy and his Philadelphia Orchestra.
Stephens was born to Septimus Stephens of Aberdeen and Ann ( née Cooke ) in Walworth, London and grew up in nearby Lambeth.
* ‘ Tring Cutting ’, Hertfordshire, 17 June 1837 by John Cooke Bourne which is on display at the National Portrait Gallery, London.
Deryck Cooke: Thematic Patterns in Sonatas of Beethoven, by Rudolph Reti ( London, Faber, 1967 )
" The voices and accents of the Italian comic actors were dubbed in London, mainly by Robert Rieti, and edited in Rome by Malcolm Cooke, who had been a post-sync dialogue editor on Lawrence of Arabia.
* John Walsingham Cooke Meredith, father of the ' Eight London Merediths '
Letter from America had its origin in London Letter, a 15-minute talk for American listeners on life in Britain that Cooke recorded during the 1930s while working as London correspondent for NBC.
London Letter came to an end when Cooke emigrated to America in 1937, but it was not long before he suggested to the BBC the idea of continuing the idea in reverse.

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