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Description: Group posing in front of Muir Lodge, Jan. 2, 1921. Sam Marks is the right-most of the 3 people sitting in front of the flagpole. Edgar Cook is standing behind the darkly attired man sitting in the chair. Elizabeth “Betty” Cook is standing just left of her husband.
Photographer: Edgar W. Cook
Donor: Edgar W. Cook
Original: B&W print in holdings of Angeles Chapter Archives
Credit: Edgar W. Cook Collection, Sierra Club-Angeles Chapter Archives
Image ID: Cook 001 jpg
NO KNOWN COPYRIGHT RESTRICTIONS:
By asserting "no known copyright restrictions," the SIERRA CLUB ANGELES CHAPTER HISTORY COMMITTEE is sharing the benefit of our research without providing an expressed or implied warranty to others who would like to use or reproduce the photograph. This means that we are unaware of any current copyright restrictions on the works so designated, either because the term of copyright may have expired without being renewed, because no evidence has been found that copyright restrictions apply, because the original creator has granted us permission to post the image on the Internet, or because we own the copyright but are not exercising that control. The HISTORY COMMITTEE cannot guarantee that private or commercial use of the images shared herein will not violate the rights of unidentified copyright holders and we cannot be responsible for any liability resulting from the use of these images.
If you make use of a photo from this source, you are reminded to conduct an independent analysis of applicable law before proceeding with a particular new use.
Chicago, IL (Cook County)
Chicago, officially the City of Chicago, is the most populous city in the U.S. state of Illinois, and the third most populous city in the United States. With an estimated population of 2,693,976 in 2019, it is also the most populous city in the Midwestern United States. Chicago is the county seat of Cook County, the second most populous county in the U.S., while a small portion of the city's O'Hare Airport also extends into DuPage County.
In the mid-18th century, the area was inhabited by the Potawatomi, a Native American tribe who had succeeded the Miami and Sauk and Fox peoples in this region. The first known non-indigenous permanent settler in Chicago was explorer Jean Baptiste Point du Sable. Du Sable was of African and French descent, born in the French colony of Saint-Domingue (Haiti), and arrived in the 1780s. He is commonly known as the "Founder of Chicago". (1)
References (1) Wikipedia en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicago
Cook Out (3,439 square feet)
1254 Emmet Street North, Charlottesville, VA
This location opened in March 2012; it was originally a Long John Silver's, which was built in 1987, replacing the original building on site that opened in April 1973. The restaurant was converted to an A&W combo location in the early 2000s and closed in 2011.
Thankfully I got up early to take this shot. As it turned out, this was the only time that Mt Cook's summit was visible all weekend. Lesson here, never miss an opportunity to take a photo, because you may never get that chance again
Um campo de feno
É difícil imaginar vacas no vale de Yosemite. Mas no final de 1800, cavalos e mulas transportavam turistas para o Vale, enquanto o gado e ovelhas forneciam leite e carne aos hotéis.
Os primeiros pioneiros plantaram colheitas neste prado. Eles também permitiram que seus animais pastassem aqui.
Essas práticas compactaram o solo e danificaram plantas dos prados.
Após as pastagens terem sido eliminadas do vale de Yosemite no final da década de 1920, a vegetação nativa retornou.
Olhando através deste prado hoje, você pode ver gamos se alimentando nos gramados ou coiotes e ratos dos prados.
Description: Edgar W. Cook and Adaline Fau posing with summit register on Waterman Mountain, November 15, 1925. Verso captioned: “According to my records, this is the ‘longest continuous hike’ ever taken by a So. Calif. Sierra Club Girl. 60 miles—27 hours. Coldbrook Camp to Sierra Madre.”
Photographer: Edgar W. Cook
Donor: Edgar W. Cook
Original: B&W print in holdings of Angeles Chapter Archives
Image ID (file name): Cook 152 enhanced
NO KNOWN COPYRIGHT RESTRICTIONS:
By asserting "no known copyright restrictions," the SIERRA CLUB ANGELES CHAPTER HISTORY COMMITTEE is sharing the benefit of our research without providing an expressed or implied warranty to others who would like to use or reproduce the photograph. This means that we are unaware of any current copyright restrictions on the works so designated, either because the term of copyright may have expired without being renewed, because no evidence has been found that copyright restrictions apply, because the original creator has granted us permission to post the image on the Internet, or because we own the copyright but are not exercising that control. The HISTORY COMMITTEE cannot guarantee that private or commercial use of the images shared herein will not violate the rights of unidentified copyright holders and we cannot be responsible for any liability resulting from the use of these images.
If you make use of a photo from this source, you are reminded to conduct an independent analysis of applicable law before proceeding with a particular new use.
This is one of my favorites of the whole session! This girl loves her parents! Throughout the whole session she was constantly clinging, hugging, and holding.
What a doll.
all photos are copyrighted
I don't cook that much, but chicken is the easiest for me. I love basil and this vinaigrette is a good marinade, but don't forget to heavily season the chicken first. It was delicious with a bit of sear and not overcooked. Perfect with salad and basmati rice.
A stroll down memory lane...
a little off the beaten path between Moore Farms and Lake City lies Memory Lane, down which you'll stumble upon Cook Cemetery. The site is a beautiful family cemetery, and offers a reminder of the history of The South and the fragility of life. As with many cemeteries, the visitor is struck by the seemingly high number of infant/toddler deaths. Not surprising when one considers the advancements in medicine the past 200 years. Pneumonia, influenza, and appendicitis hardly represent certain death in advanced cultures in 2014. Not necessarily so in the 1800s.
Founded about 1840 where Colonial Road from southeast crossed San Antonio Road. Settler Gabriel Jackson had two-story log cabin trading post here. Community was named for Silas L. Cooke, who surveyed much land in this vicinity. It is now a thriving rural village. (1969) (Marker No. 7566)
1905 Cook_Irene_Johnson_1905_01.tif 1st Female Faculty Alumni Class of 1892 Mrs. John M. Cook Students 1st Female Graduate First Female Faculty First Female Graduate
Every October, the Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk Chili Cook-Off is a super fun event for both the cooking teams and the public tasters! Current event details at beachboardwalk.com/chili
On the morning of Friday, September 13 all the students from Cook Elementary headed out to the front of their school for the official opening of their playground.
During the short ceremony, Cook Principal Dan Knibbs thanked his PAC community for their outstanding work raising thousands of dollars to pay for the new playground. Students also got a tutorial on how to use some of the new equipment safely.