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274:(1954) (see below), had started working with Huestis Cook to prepare a book about him and his father. He gave them valuable personal information about his family and their photographic enterprise. After Huestis Cook's death, the researchers aided the transport of the Cook collection to his widow's new home. On September 15, 1954
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Cook bought the contents of the
Anderson Studio in Richmond, and retained its images as part of his own collection. He also bought other collections. When Huestis became an adult, he also worked as a photographer. Together his father and he created and collected some 10,000 images on glass-plate
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After running a gallery in New
Orleans, for ten years he traveled throughout the South, and other major cities. He briefly settled in one city after another. He would establish a studio in a town, train photographers, sell the studio to a promising student, and move on.
84:(February 23, 1819 – November 27, 1902) was an early American photographer known as a pioneer in the development of the field. Primarily a studio portrait photographer, he is the first to have taken a photograph of combat during a war: he captured images in 1863 of Union
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For a decade he moved throughout the South and other cities, living for a time in each. He would train students in photography, sell his studio to one, and move on. From 1849, he became skilled in daguerrotype technique after settling in
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The
Valentine has digitized 1400 images from the Cook collection and made them available online. It continues to work on cataloguing, digitizing, and organizing the huge collection. From July to November 2019, The Valentine mounted
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acquired much of the Cook collection, a total of 10,000 images, mostly glass-plate negatives. From July to
November 2019, The Valentine had an exhibit of 40 photographs from this collection. Some 1400 images are available online.
231:(1868-1951), became professional photographers, too. George had gotten established before Cook decided to move to Richmond, and he took over his father's studio in Charleston, operating it for another decade. After the
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In addition to his own photographs, Cook amassed a large collection of photographs by others of political figures, Richmond and other areas of the South, landscapes and buildings. He died on
November 27, 1902.
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museum purchased much of the Cook collection from Mary
Latimer Cook, the widow of Huestis. It was a total of 10,000 images, including prints and thousands of glass-plate negatives.
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negatives, featuring portraits of figures and places across the South, and particularly in and around
Richmond. Huestis took over the Cook Studio and had a career of 60 years.
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Shadows in Silver; A Record of
Virginia, 1850-1900, In Contemporary Photographs Taken by George and Huestis Cook, with Additions from the Cook Collection
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Shadows in Silver: A Record of
Virginia, 1850-1900, in Contemporary Photographs Taken by George and Huestis Cook with Additions from the Cook Collection
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Shadows in Silver: A Record of
Virginia, 1850-1900, in Contemporary Photographs Taken by George and Huestis Cook with Additions from the Cook Collection
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George Cook was the first known photographer to make a photograph of actual combat during a war. Cook took the first image of its kind while visiting
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Elizabeth Cook died in 1864. Cook soon remarried, to her niece Lavinia Pratt, and had additional children with her, including a second son.
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Cook is known for having amassed a large collection of photographs of figures of the Confederacy and the South, as well as the city of
322:"Virginia Spotswood McKenney Claiborne (1887 – 1981): activist for women's education and occupational opportunity, museum director"
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The father and son were honored posthumously in 1952 (a year after Huestis's death) by an exhibit of their work, entitled
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also became notable photographers, and the younger particularly contributed to the family collection.
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in 1839. He became fascinated by this new technique and became interested in photography.
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on the city. He took the first ever combat photograph in 1863, made during a visit to
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George S. and Huestis P. Cook were honored in 1952 with a major exhibition at the
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by A. Lawrence Kocher and Howard Dearstyne, New York: Scribner (1954)
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In 1954, during the directorship of Virginia McKenney Claiborne,
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Cook finally settled permanently with his wife Elizabeth in
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509:19th-century American photographers
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360:"The Southern Matthew Brady"
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455:"Behind the Cook Studio"
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393:. September 24, 2019.
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16:American photographer
225:George LaGrange Cook
192:George LaGrange Cook
159:on September 8, 1863
109:George LaGrange Cook
391:Charleston Magazine
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320:Campbell, Alice W.
296:John Henry Devereux
259:. In 1954 the book
253:Southern Exposure,
223:Both of his sons,
218:Richmond, Virginia
196:American Civil War
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124:Southern Exposure.
113:Huestis Pratt Cook
105:Richmond, Virginia
272:Shadows in Silver
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67:(1902-11-27)
504:1902 deaths
499:1819 births
331:January 31,
200:Fort Sumter
169:New Orleans
122:, entitled
493:Categories
372:2011-02-12
307:References
206:firing on
155:firing on
145:Charleston
88:firing on
47:1819-02-23
440:via JSTOR
204:ironclads
153:ironclads
135:Biography
86:ironclads
290:See also
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243:Legacy
425:JSTOR
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