Offprint from the Proceedings of the Cambridge Antiquarian Society CII (2013), pp.73-92.
There is no record of Cook(e)'s apprenticeship or the completion of an apprenticeship. His mark as a plateworker was entered on 28 June 1799 at 29 Carey Steet, Bell Yard. On 14 January 1805 he moved to 3 Carey Street. His work is noted to have 'survived in reasonable quantity' (470). This biographical information is found on page 470 of Grimwade's London Goldsmiths and his marks is available in the same text on page 166 signified by no. 2289.
Rowed number 6 in 1966 for the Kent School, Connecticut, Henley Crew.
Born 19 October 1951 in Hale, Cheshire and studies at Summerfields, Oxford 1959-65 and Radley College 1965-69. Studied Classics Exhibition at Jesus College. Worked his way up in the clergy. Rowed stroke and bow, and was captain for the Jesus College Boat Club in the 1970s.
Rowed number 4 in 1966 for the Kent School, Connecticut, Henley Crew.
Master of Jesus College from 1986 to 1997 and the first Director of the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, championing some of the earliest applications of archaeogenetics, as well as a critical and investigative approach to the illicit antiquities market. His fieldwork expanded to Orkney, and latterly returned to the more southerly isles of the Cyclades, subject of his doctoral research, and to remarkable discoveries on the island of Keros.