Background
Doctor Mary Cook was born in Barnsley, Yorkshire, England on 4 August 1902. Doctor Cook worked as a general practitioner until her first son was born in 1931, later she lectured on public health to nursing students in Pretoria.
Doctor Mary Cook was born in Barnsley, Yorkshire, England on 4 August 1902. Doctor Cook worked as a general practitioner until her first son was born in 1931, later she lectured on public health to nursing students in Pretoria.
She studied medicine at Leeds University, graduating in 1925. Doctor Cook’s fascination with Cape architecture and decorative arts started during family holidays to the Western Cape, she studied the topic and did research in the archives.
Becoming known as an authority on the subject she started campaigning for the preservation of Cape architecture and, from 1947, she wrote regularly on the subject in journals and newspapers. In 1958 she took up the position of cultural historian at the South African Museum, putting her in charge of their cultural history collections. These at the time where primarily located at Koopmans-de Wet House, Strand Street, Cape Town.
In 1965 she was appointed the curator at the Drostdy Museum in Swellendam.
She held this position until her retirement in 1974. Doctor Cook was awarded an Honorary Doctorate from Stellenbosch University in 1971.
She retired to her house Ballotina in Church Street, Tulbagh, which she had bought in 1945. And died on 2 August 1981.