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Hope Cooke

Also Known As: "Hope Namgyal"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: San Francisco, San Francisco, California, United States
Immediate Family:

Daughter of John Cooke and Hope Townsend
Ex-wife of Palden Thondup Namgyal and Private
Mother of Private and Private
Half sister of Private

Occupation: Author
Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:
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Immediate Family

About Hope Cooke

Hope Namgyal Wallace (Cooke), former Queen Consort

  • See Hope's biographical information at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hope_Cooke
    • "Hope Cooke (born June 24, 1940) is an American woman who was the "Gyalmo" (Tibetan: རྒྱལ་མོ་, Wylie: rgyal mo) (Queen Consort) of the 12th Chogyal (King) of Sikkim (Palden Thondup Namgyal). Their wedding took place in March 1963.
    • "Palden Thondup Namgyal was to be the last king of Sikkim as a protectorate state under India. By 1973, the country—and their marriage—were crumbling; soon Sikkim was annexed by India. Five months after the violent takeover of Sikkim had begun, Cooke returned to the USA with her two birth children and step-daughter to put them in schools in New York City. Cooke and her husband divorced in 1980 and Namgyal died of cancer in 1982. Cooke wrote an autobiography, Time Change (Simon & Schuster 1981) and began a career as a lecturer, book critic and magazine contributor, later becoming an urban historian. In her new life as a student of New York City, Cooke published Seeing New York (Temple University Press 1995); worked as a newspaper columnist (Daily News); taught at Yale University, Sarah Lawrence, and Birchwathen, a New York City independent school. During this time she ran the Public History walking program at the Museum of the City of New York and lectured widely on urban history and East-West cultural ties.
    • "Early life and family
    • "Cooke was born in San Francisco, to an Irish-American father, John J. Cooke, a flight instructor, and Hope Noyes, an amateur pilot. Her mother died in January 1942 at age 25 when the plane she was flying solo crashed.
    • "After her mother's death, Cooke and her half-sister, Harriet Townsend, moved to a New York City apartment across the hall from their maternal grandparents, Helen (Humpstone) and Winchester Noyes, the president of J.H. Winchester & Co., an international shipping brokerage firm. They were raised by a succession of governesses. Her grandfather died when she was 12; her grandmother, three years later. Cooke became the ward of her aunt and uncle, Mary Paul (Noyes) and Selden Chapin, a former US Ambassador to Iran and Peru. She studied at Chapin School, in New York. She attended The Madeira School for three years before finishing high school in Iran.
    • "Marriage to the Crown Prince of Sikkim
    • "In 1959, Cooke was a freshman majoring in Asian Studies at Sarah Lawrence College and sharing an apartment with actress Jane Alexander. She went on a summer trip to India and met Palden Thondup Namgyal, Crown Prince of Sikkim, in the bar of the Windamere Hotel in Darjeeling, India. He was a recent widower with two sons and a daughter, and, aged 36, nearly twice her age. They were drawn to each other by the similar isolation of their childhoods. Two years later, in 1961, their engagement was announced; but the wedding was put off for more than a year because astrologers in both Sikkim and India warned that 1962 was an inauspicious year for marriages.
    • "On March 20, 1963, Cooke married Namgyal in a Buddhist monastery. She renounced her United States citizenship as required by Sikkim's laws and also as a demonstration to the people of Sikkim that she was not an "American arm" in the Himalayas. She was dropped from the Social Register but the marriage was reported in National Geographic magazine. The New Yorker followed the royal couple on one of their yearly trips to America. He was crowned monarch of Sikkim in 1965. However, their marriage faced strains, and both had affairs, he with a married Belgian woman, and she with an American friend.
    • "Cooke's husband was deposed in 1975 and confined to his palace under house arrest. The couple soon separated. Cooke returned to Manhattan, where she raised her children, Palden and Hope Leezum. In May 1975, Representative James W. Symington (D-MO) and Senator Mike Mansfield (D-MT) sponsored private bills to restore her citizenship, however, after the bill passed the Senate, several members of the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Immigration objected, and the bill had to be amended to grant her only U.S. permanent resident status before it could gain their support and pass Congress. President Gerald Ford signed the bill into law on June 16, 1976. By 1981, she still had not been able to regain U.S. citizenship. The royal couple divorced in 1980, and Namgyal died of cancer in 1982 in New York City.
    • "Later life
    • "With child support from Namgyal and a small inheritance from her grandparents, she rented an apartment in Yorkville, Manhattan. This time around, she felt "profoundly displaced" in the city and started going on walking tours and then creating her own. She studied Dutch journals, old church sermons, and newspaper articles to acquaint herself with the city and lectured on the social history of New York. She wrote a weekly column, "Undiscovered Manhattan," for The Daily News. She wrote an award-winning memoir of her life in Sikkim, Time Change: an autobiography (1981), and, with Jacques d'Amboise, published Teaching the Magic of Dance.
    • "Cooke remarried in 1983 to Mike Wallace, PhD, a Pulitzer Prize-winning historian and Distinguished Professor of History at John Jay College of Criminal Justice. They later divorced. Hope Cooke's son, Prince Palden, a New York banker and financial advisor, married Kesang Deki Tashi and has a son and two daughters. Cooke's daughter, Princess Hope, graduated from Milton Academy and Georgetown University, and married (and later divorced) Thomas Gwyn Reich Jr., a U.S. Foreign Service officer; she remarried, to Yep Wangyal Tobden.
    • "Hope Cooke lives in Brooklyn and currently works as a writer, historian, and lecturer. She was a consultant for PBS's New York: A Documentary Film (1999–2001). Cooke is a regular contributor to book reviews and magazines, also lectures widely.
    • "Publications
    • "Time Change: an autobiography, New York: Simon & Schuster, 1981. ISBN 0-671-41225-6.
    • "Teaching the Magic of Dance, New York : Simon & Schuster, 1983 (with Jacques d'Amboise). ISBN 0-671-46077-3.
    • "Seeing New York : History Walks for Armchair and Footloose Travelers, Philadelphia : Temple University Press, 1995. ISBN 1-56639-289-6.
    • "Hope Cook wrote several articles for the Bulletin of Tibetology, published by the Namgyal Institute of Tibetology.
  • From page 156, "Cooke, Hope (1049-)" in American Women Speak -- An Encyclopedia and Document Collection of Women's Oratory. Volume 1: A-H. By Mary Ellen Snodgrass. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO, 2017. Available online at https://www.google.com/books/edition/American_Women_Speak_An_Encycl...
    • "A wistful icon of shifting destinies, Hope Cooke, the American-born queen carved a career out of the scholarly study of New York City. A native of San Francisco born on June 24, 1940, to divorcee Hope Noyes Townsend and Irish-American flight instructor Jogn J. Cooke, she grew up fatherless after John deserted his wife, stepdaughter Harriet Townsend, and the infant Hope. She was orphaned by her mother's death in January 1942 in a nighttime solo crash of her Piper Cub into the Sierra Nevada near Reno, a probable suicide."
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Hope Cooke's Timeline

1940
June 24, 1940
San Francisco, San Francisco, California, United States
????
Sarah Lawrence College