Background
Sallie Catherine Cook was born near the community of Snow Creek in Franklin County, Virginia. Her parents were Samuel Shrewsbury and Mildred Dawson Cook.
Sallie Catherine Cook was born near the community of Snow Creek in Franklin County, Virginia. Her parents were Samuel Shrewsbury and Mildred Dawson Cook.
She was the third woman elected to the Virginia House of Delegates, and to the Virginia General Assembly as a whole. Direct relatives included two writers, Mark Twain and John Esten Cooke. With him she had seven children, one of whom, Jesse Wootten Booker, Junior., would go on to become a city councilor and mayor of Martinsville.
Early in married life the couple moved to Martinsville, where she became active in a number of clubs and civic organizations, including the First Methodist Church and the United Daughters of the Confederacy.
A plot of land which she owned was used to demarcate one of the boundaries of Martinsville in 1892 when it was rechartered an independent city. Booker first ran for the House of Delegates in 1926, on the Democratic ticket.
She was unopposed. She began the 1928 election season without opposition as well, but soon was challenged by Republican R. L. Stone, of Bassett, who ran under the slogan, "Membership in the General Assembly is a man"s job".
Furthermore, it is said that at one point Stone appealed to voters by saying, "You can"t elect Mistress Booker again. Why she"s an old woman." To this she replied by removing her hat, standing, and stating: "Your hair is a lot whiter than mine." Nevertheless, after winning reelection she said that her opponent had run a "gentlemanly campaign – entirely free from "mud slinging" and when defeated was too gallant to "sulk in his tents"".
During her time in Richmond Booker"s deskmate in the Assembly was James H. Price, later to become Governor of Virginia. Foreign portions of her term she served alongside three women: Sarah Lee Fain of Norfolk, Vinnie Caldwell of Galax, and Helen Ruth Henderson of Buchanan County, whose mother had with Fain been one of the first two women elected to the House of Delegates, in 1924.
Her husband died in September, 1935.
She died at the Shacklesford hospital in Martinsville after two months" illness, and was interred in the family plot in that city"s Oakwood Cemetery. Her seven children survived her, as did a sister. Her epitaph reads, "Into Thy hands I commend my spirit.".
She was politically active as well, being a member of both the Fifth District Congressional Committee and the Democratic Executive Committee, and also spent over twenty-five years as a schoolteacher.