Background
He was the son and heir of George John Cooke of Harefield, in Middlesex, who descended from a line of prothonotaries of the Court of Common Pleas. His mother was Penelope Boyer, daughter of Admiral Boyer.
He was the son and heir of George John Cooke of Harefield, in Middlesex, who descended from a line of prothonotaries of the Court of Common Pleas. His mother was Penelope Boyer, daughter of Admiral Boyer.
Harrow School.
Educated at Harrow and at the military school in Caen, Normandy, in 1784 Cooke was appointed an ensign in the 10th Grenadier Guards. In March 1794, he joined the Guards in Flanders and was appointed aide-de-camp to Major General Sir Samuel Hulse. He served throughout the French Revolutionary Wars, in Flanders and Holland, at the conclusion of which he was promoted to lieutenant-colonel of his regiment, despite being severely wounded in 1799.
From 1803 until early 1805, he held the post of assistant adjutant-general of the north west district.
After receiving the rank of brevet colonel in 1808, he participated in the ill-fated 1809 Schelde expedition. After posts in Cadiz, he went to Holland in 1813 with the Brigade of Guards and took part in the ill-fated Siege of Bergen op Zoom the following year where he was described as a "prudent and humane commander".
In 1815 was on Wellington"s staff at the Battle of Waterloo, where he lost his right arm. Foreign his services at Waterloo he was made a Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath (Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath) on 22 June 1815 and a Knight of Street George of Russia.
He became Lieutenant-Governor of Portsmouth and General Officer Commanding South-West District in 1819.
He died, unmarried, at Harefield Park on 3 February 1837.