b. 8 October 1808, Malta, Saratoga County, New York
d. 28 July 1892, Saratoga Springs, New York
Nelson Cook (rarely, Cooke, seen esp in Canada) was the son of furniture-maker Joseph Cook (b. ca 1768, Wallingford, CT - d. 22 Dec 1864) and Mary Ann Tolman (rarely and incorrectly, Tallman), b. Guilford, MA; the parents moved to the Ballston Spa/Malta area of Saratoga County around 1800 from Wallingford. Cook's birthdate given here is derived from his death certificate, which, instead of indicating his birthdate, lists his age at death as 83y, 9m, 20d. This date is generally supported by census data. A number of sources report Cook's year of birth as 1817, but his death certificate, census data, and the logic of his career confirm the earlier year; the 1817 date may derive from an incorrect obituary entry in the Rochester Chronicle, 30 July 1892, and others.
![]() Ransom Cook, ca 1850? Photo courtesy of H. A. Eastman |
Around 1832 Cook left the Saratoga area for Canada, where he spent 6-8 years as an itinerant painter (supplementing his income as an agent for Ransom's business -- see below). Eventually settling in Toronto, Cook sharpened his skills painting individuals and families of modest circumstances as well as the more affluent and well connected; this included several Lt Governors (see, eg, Sir Francis Bond Head), military figures, and those associated with the growing canal industry. In 1834, in the first exhibition sponsored by "The Society of Artists and Amateurs" of Toronto, Cook was among 18 artists -- including pioneers of Canadian art Paul Kane and James Hamilton -- who displayed 196 works. According to the 1860 census of Saratoga County, Cook's daughter was born in Canada in the late 1830s. He returned to New York State around 1839 and continued his portraiture in various Upstate cities, especially Rochester. Here for a time he worked out of the Blossom Hotel and, later, the Crystal Palace Block on Main Street (he was able to move art materials from this location in advance of a fire which apparently leveled the area); for a short time he worked in Buffalo (ca 1853), where he had a studio at the Clarendon Hotel.
In the late '50s Cook returned to Saratoga for a time and taught art at Temple Grove Seminary, a school for young women on the eventual site of Skidmore College. Later he spent some twelve years in Rome, NY, where illness may have contributed to an ongoing decline in portrait commissions. Throughout his career Cook seems to have kept up with other artists, past and present. In a letter (New York, 1858) to Mansfield Walworth, in whom he apparently worked to create an appreciation of the arts, Cook cites Murillo's Madonna as the "most valuable work of Art in our country," one which reflected his own striving to capture on canvas "the human face divine." His personal art collection, apparently spare, included some works reflective of classical artists (eg, Titian, Carracci) and themes, as well as of more contemporary American painters such as Benjamin West and John Singleton Copley. His letters make occasional references, some not especially complimentary, to other contemporary portraitists (and their fees) who comprised his competition.
![]() Esther Cook, ca 1853 Photo courtesy of H. A. Eastman |
![]() Prof Frank B. Ellenwood and son Louis, date unknown Photo courtesy of H. A. Eastman |
![]() Esther Marion Ellenwood Eastman, c. 1897 Photo courtesy of H. A. Eastman |
Like his immediate and extended family, the artist himself suffered from illness, although when younger he claimed he kept working as long as he didn't fall out of his chair. The Rochester fire which took some of his painting "specimens" and nearly destroyed his studio exhausted him from "overexertion" for a period of time in 1854. During his years in Rome, NY, Cook was quite ill, complaining in 1875 of a "nervous disorder." However, by April of 1877 he admitted a weakness which made it hard for him to carry his satchel on a trip to the Centennial Exhibition in Philadelphia. This apparently was the result of a hernia and internal abscess which led him to write Ransom (Nov, 1877) that he felt his "painting days are nearly over." The details of this affliction are gruesome: "My hernia is worse," he writes. "The number of times each day I am obliged to manipulate the intestines to get it out of the scrotum... and adjust the truss, increase. The intestine has greatly increased in size when out, so the manipulation gives me more pain. There appears to be no relief for scrotocele [a hernia in the scrotum], especially after the age of 70." The abscess broke on 6 Dec 1877, and Cook apparently recovered fully (but see below).
Money is also a constant theme of Cook's letters to his brother Ransom, and he portrays himself as continually in debt. Typically for those in his profession, Cook was forced to cultivate patrons in various locales to present his skills to potential sitters, preferably wealthy [see Alice Chester (1854)]. Although the artist claimed to be doing better than some of his competitors, the rates he charged for his work seem paltry by modern standards: In 1854 a "bust" (head and shoulders) of a child cost $35; an adult bust: $50; a full portrait: $70 or more; he told Ransom he earned only $1817 in a twenty-two month period between 1851 and 1853; rent for his studios in Rochester cost Cook $75 annually. Nelson regularly sought to borrow funds from Ransom, whose business evidently prospered; he served for a time as an agent in Toronto for Ransom and his business partner, Thomas Davenport (inventor of an electric motor) and, later, as his brother's representative in New York cities while he sought portrait work. In 1854 Cook negotiated with his brother for a loan with which to purchase a piano for his daughter, Marion, suggesting that Ransom take a mortgage for the instrument and promising not to build on his property in Saratoga until the debt was paid. In 1875, while ill in Rome, NY, Cook pursued that financial gambit again, negotiating a chattel mortgage for $51.83 (perhaps $1000 today) on many of his personal possessions, including furniture, tableware, (some? all? of) his personal art collection (with an engraving of Sir Francis Bond Head), and artist equipment (a sitter's chair, paints, easels, etc.).
![]() Cook parlor, date unknown Photo courtesy of H. A. Eastman |
His letters to Ransom reveal other aspects of Cook's personality, perhaps because he feels he can speak freely to his brother. By the mid-1850s he is clearly disillusioned with organized religion and is relentless in his criticism of the clergy, whom he accuses of "avarice, laziness, vain pride, egotism, Dogmatism, one-idea-ism, Dictatorialness, tyranny, cruelty, injustice, falsehood, slander, gluttony, intemperance, and libertinism" (all of which he admits he keeps from clients). To add to Cook's irritation, a churchman apparently had begun a portrait of Marion but left it unfinished to attend a revival -- was it this which led him to forbid Marion (for a time at least in 1854) to attend Sunday school or Bible class? To Cook the Catholic clergy is the most suspect, and he is distressed when some of Reuben Walworth's children, under the influence of the Chancellor's second wife Ellen (1857) convert to Catholicism. His attendance at church is rare, and the artist does not hesitate to paint on Sunday when pressed for time. However, before that decade was out he apparently had a change of heart: While in 1854 he deemed himself a "Deist," the records of the Bethesda Episcopal Church indicate he was baptized on 9 October 1857 and confirmed on 29 April 1858. It was about this time that Nelson gave to his daughter Marion an inscribed Episcopal Book of Common Prayer (still in the possession of descendants), a gesture which, like his baptism and confirmation, would seem to support a change of Cook's heart with regard to organized religion. (At some point he also gave his wife Esther a Bible.)
Cook's religious views apparently influenced his politics: In 1854 he said he had left the Whigs in favor of the "Know Nothing" or, later, the "American" Party. This was a significant admission (albeit to Ransom, whom he urged to join), since "Know Nothings" originally were a secret, oath-bound society based largely on nativist, anti-Catholic, anti-immigrant beliefs (Cook's claim at that time that he was "a democrat [small 'd']; and a Republican to the core" was apparently a general statement of philosophy, not yet reflective of affiliation with a political party). Is it a coincidence that ex-President Millard Fillmore became the American Party's presidential candidate in 1856 and that Cook may have painted (1845-52) Fillmore's son? In 1861 he expressed support for abolitionists and Lincoln, hoping southern rebels "will get their just deserts," and after the Civil War Cook cast his lot with the Republican Party. He complained to Ransom that brothers Truman and Marcus and brother-in-law Ira Millard (sister Mary Ann's husband) "still crawl with the Copperheads [northern Democrats with Southern sympathies]" and (out of sympathy with his clients?) scorned radical "Greenbackers." In 1880, the year before Ransom's death, Nelson and his brother took some comfort that they outnumbered their political opponents in the family "5 Republicans to 3 Copperheads." (It is interesting that brother Truman in Washington seemed not to return such apparent ill-will, saying of Nelson that his "heart always was open to the good and the true" [Truman>Ransom, 1870]).
Cook has been described as an "occasional poet," and he may have viewed poetry as his true calling. He apparently dreamed of publishing a volume of his verse, which he used to describe the pastoral scenes he missed painting as a portraitist -- perhaps in his mind more a business than a passion. But in an 1877 letter to Ransom, he mentions that he has painted a landscape (he dubbed it the Salvator, perhaps a reference to the 17th century Italian artist Salvator Rosa, whose "sublime" landscapes influenced Thomas Cole and perhaps other landscapists); during much of Cook's career portraits and not landscapes provided income for American artists, which may explain why Cook wanted to crate the Salvator and ship it to London.
His poetry appeared in newspapers of the day. These lines are from a sonnet of Cook's in the Saratoga Whig (4 Feb 1848), perhaps written during a visit to Clinton County to see Ransom, then working on the new State prison there:
Mount Dannemora! from thy towering hight,
O'er a wild country far down lookest thou:
Thy stately trees swayed before the night,
Of tempests for a century, doth bow
And yield at last....
The Rochester Daily Union published several of his poems during his extended stay in that city:
From "Summer," 24 June 1854:
'Tis early morn; the orient light
Begins to glow round Horus' car;
Waves o'er his steeds a banner bright,
Glad Herald in his path afar!
See, o'er the mountain's burnished height
The clouds with golden fringe unfurled;
Th' unwearied orb of day and light,
Ascends, exulting o'er the world!
From "The Hills of Corning," 14 September 1854:
A few short years ago the forest tall
Stood 'neath this sunny sky,
Where stately edifice and spacious Hall
Now greet the trav'ler's eye--
Where winds the blue Chemung,
Oft sweetly sung.
Upon the hill's broad slope a village stands,
And on the river's shore,
Where furious, harnessed in huge iron bands,
With Neigh and deaf'ning roar
The steam horse rushes by,
And seems to fly!
Clearly dissatisfied with limited newspaper exposure, Cook sought -- unsuccessfully, it seems -- publication in magazines (Harper's, Appleton's) and in 1871 asked Ransom to recommend him to an editor. He wrote some of his descriptive poetry based on information from others, and on at least one occasion this led to the inclusion of inaccurate poetic images and some serious self-criticism: "I have published so much trash," he wrote. "I sincerely repent of it. Yet I was not alone -- a vast multitude joined me in doing the same thing. It is a poor excuse however." He threatened to burn all of his poems in Ransom's presence, although it is not clear whether he actually followed through. [See Alice Chester (1854).]
![]() Nelson Cook, date unknown Photo courtesy of H. A. Eastman |
The precise gravesite of Nelson Cook and his immediate family is unknown, perhaps obscured by misplaced records and even vandalism. The search continues, however. It is nearly certain that he is buried in Greenridge Cemetery in Saratoga (his death certificate places his grave there), although probably not in the "seashell" enclosure designed by Ransom for much of the Cook family. Nelson, forever the poet, wrote verses to "Greenridge Cemetery" as he and Ransom philosophized about old age and death (1880):
How blest is the place where the forms now remaineth,
Which once walked before us, in beauty and bloom...

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