Isaac T. Cook

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Isaac T. Cook

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Madison Township, Fayette, Ohio, USA
Death: November 21, 1935 (62)
Pima, Arizona, USA
Place of Burial: Saint Louis, St. Louis City, Missouri, USA
Immediate Family:

Son of James Felix Cook and Mary Augusta Myers
Ex-husband of Jesse Carelton McCrea
Father of Carleton McCrea Cook; Elizabeth Jeanette Cook and Jessie Augusta Cook
Brother of Katherine M Cook; Elizabeth S Cook; James Felix Cook; John Willis Cook and Fanny Cook

Managed by: Kevin Allen Connor
Last Updated:

About Isaac T. Cook

GEDCOM Note

http://www.accessgenealogy.com/scripts/data/database.cgi?ArticleID=... Cook, Isaac Thompson
The following data is extracted from Centennial History of Missouri.

Isaac Thompson Cook has earned his popular place among the distinguished men of St. Louis through his connection with the erection of many of the finest office buildings and commercial structures which have recently transformed the business section into one of metropolitan proportions. About the time when the exposition was attracting to the city many visitors the chief criticism passed upon it was concerning its lack of modern sky-scraper business buildings, and in recent years the city's development has in no other line been more marked than in the direction of meeting this criticism. Today the high office building is the rule and not the exception and the progress in this connection Is attributable largely to Isaac Thompson Cook.

He was born in Fayette county, Ohio, on the 28th of August, 1871, of the marriage of Major James F. and Mary Augusta (Myers) Cook, and while spending his boyhood days under the parental roof he pursued a thorough public school education at Washington Court House, Ohio. In November, 1896, Mr. Cook located in St. Louis, entering the real estate and financial world. While buying and selling properties was one of the fields of his endeavor, he is more generally known as the father of the sky-scraper buildings of St. Louis, he being responsible for the existence of many of the highest class. Thus through his labors have come about the most material changes in the business center of the city, and this has been accomplished so rapidly that St. Louis equals in the character of its office buildings the three cities of the country which outrank it in size. He has made a special study of the development of the business section and has been the conspicuous figure in the handling of large leaseholds. A recital of the larger transactions in business property contracted by Mr. Cook closely approaches a history of that development covering the last five years. Among his achievements he can point to such buildings as the Chemical, the Wright, the Frisco, the University Club and the Arcade building as examples of financing and construction. He now does a large real estate business and has the management of the Odd Fellows, Columbia, Carleton, Wall, Leather Trades and Drygoodsman buildings in addition to the foregoing.

His operations, however, have not been confined to St. Louis but are national in. scope. He was associated in the promotion of one of the modern sky-scrapers and also a magnificent hotel at Seattle, Washington, a large office and commercial building at Omaha, Nebraska; Kansas City, Missouri; Dallas, Texas; and a large office building for an insurance company at Chattanooga, Tennessee; an office building at Boston, Massachusetts, and Indianapolis, Indiana, are attributed to Mr. Cook's activities in planning and promoting such structures, while Chaffee, Missouri, one of the newest cities of the state, owes its existence to his remarkable energy and ability. A number of the most prominent business men of St. Louis are supporters of Mr. Cook in his enterprises and accept his judgment without question. Whenever he declares that the future of St. Louis and business conditions warrant large outlays of money in commercial structures the financial requirements are immediately forthcoming. The number of companies with which he is identified indicates in some measure the extent of his interests and of his business activity. Ile is a man of unfaltering energy and determination who readily solves intricate problems, basing his judgment not upon intuition or any superficial observation of the question but upon a thorough understanding of conditions in the business world as well as the incidents connected with the specific interest under consideration.

Mr. Cook has been married twice; first on February 28, 1894, to Miss Jessie Carleton McCrea, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. McCrea, of Washington Court House, Ohio. Of this marriage there were three children: Elizabeth Jeanette, born October 2, 1895; Jessie Augusta, March 12, 1897; and Carleton McCrea, December 25, 1903. His second marriage on October 7, 1919, was to Miss Lilyan Brown Sherwood, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Sherwood of St. Louis. They have one child, Miss Pollyanna, born September 2, 1920.

The list of organizations of which Mr. Cook is a member includes the Chamber of Commerce, Manufacturer's Association of St. Louis, the Real Estate Exchange, the St. Louis Club, the Noonday Club, the Missouri Athletic Association, the University Club, the Riverview Club, the Sunset Hill Country Club and the City Club. In political belief he is a republican, and he endorses that movement toward higher, cleaner politics which is one of the hopeful signs of the times.

issac
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Isaac T. Cook's Timeline

1873
September 22, 1873
Madison Township, Fayette, Ohio, USA
1895
October 2, 1895
Missouri, USA
1900
March 12, 1900
St Louis, St Louis, Missouri, United States
1903
December 25, 1903
Illinois, USA
1930
1930
Age 56
St. Louis
1935
November 21, 1935
Age 62
Pima, Arizona, USA
November 25, 1935
Age 62
Saint Louis, St. Louis City, Missouri, USA
????
Fayette, Ohio, USA