Berton E. Cook (1889-1958) - Author, Sailor, Teacher Photo c. 1948 |
Berton Ellsworth
Cook was born on April 5, 1889 in Amesbury, Massachussets. He was the first
child of James Norton cook, a carpenter by profession and Ellen Nora Pierce -
both born in Port Matoun, Nova Scotia. His father died early in his childhood,
exactly when I don't know, but by the 1900 census his mother was the head of
the family with 4 children.
It must have been
difficult for her to bring up the children on her own; they ended up being
fostered by the Good
Will Hinckley organization. I wasn't able to find a record of her death,
but it happened sometime between 1900 and 1918.
In 1909, Berton
graduated from the Good Will Hinckley school and joined Syracuse University
where he spent five years taking a combined teaching and forestry course - a
vocational education being needed if he was to take care of his siblings.
During the summer
vacations, he worked as a sailor aboard ships voyaging from New York. By 1914
he had a degree, an able seaman’s blue card, boxing experience and was training
for the third mate coastwise exam.
After graduating
from Syracuse in 1914, for a short time he became a surveyor in the Forest
Service with occasional trips on colliers. Over the next six years, he built a
career in teaching and started a family.
From 1914-1915 he
worked at the Deer Island School, Maine, where he met Edith Small, who was
working as a teacher there. They were married on June 1, 1915.
This was followed by
moves across several schools in Maine and one in Connecticut:
1916-1919 Deering
High School, Portland, Maine
1917 Potter Academy, Sebago,
Maine
1917-1920 North
Berwick High School, Maine
1920 Southington
High School, Connecticut
(All dates are
approximate)
He served in the
navy transport during World War 1 on the U. S. S.
Maumee. How he did all of these things in such a short span of time, I have
no clue.
In 1925, his
wandering days came to an end and he joined the Durfee High School in Fall
River, Maine as a teacher in the Social Studies department. From 1925 to 1952,
he was a teacher there.
His writing career
seems to have started in 1929, with his first story sale to Sea Stories, a Street and Smith magazine.
Another of his stories appeared in it in 1930, but then he was published by
Argosy in the same year. Argosy was among the big general fiction pulps, and
any author with a story in it was read by a wide audience, creating name
recognition for that author. For the next 2 years, no stories appeared in any
magazine.
In 1933, he broke
into Short Stories - publishing 5
stories that year. 1934 saw his only appearance in Adventure magazine. 1935 to
1937 saw him publishing stories in Argosy
and Short Stories. When Dorothy
McIlwraith took over the editor's job at Short Stories, she tried to put
together a stable of authors who appeared exclusively in Short Stories; Cook
was one of them.
From 1938 to 1951,
with the exception of one story in Argosy,
his stories appeared only in Short Stories.
Readers must have liked them, because on average he appeared in almost every
other issue. In 1952 he retired from teaching.
I've read several stories by Berton Cook, all in his series about world class collector Harden Bayle. This series is of great interest to me since the main theme is collecting, something I've devoted much of my life to(books, pulps, paperbacks, literary magazines, original art, music cds, old movie dvds, etc.
ReplyDeleteTo give you a flavor of this series I'll quote my notes from SHORT STORIES, Feb 25, 1941 issue. The story by Cook is "Squire's Island" and I read it in August 2013. It's 14 pages:
"Crazy collector Harden Bayle series. He once again sends out his flunky to buy or beg, borrow or steal, a one of a kind, unique collectible. The collectible is just some rare plaque but the series earns high grades because of the great idea. Cook wrote several more of these stories all through the 1940's"
Usually the collectible is some strange, bizarre, unusual item. I can identify with this!
Sounds interesting, one more series I look forward to reading. Thanks for the tip, Walker.
DeleteI think Matt included a Harden Bayle story by Berton Cook in the recent reissue of Argosy magazine (Fall 2016).
DeleteYou can get it here.
Yes, it does. I just saw that the Pulp Coming Attractions site broke the news of a new Harden Bayle collection from Altus Press.
ReplyDeleteI'm with you on the ebooks - not having to make more space in the house for books is definitely a win. This pricing model is a test of patience, though :-)
ReplyDeleteAs Sai knows, I'm against ebooks. I want more and more books and pulps, not less! Don't make more space in the house for books, instead buy a bigger house! We must have more books...(One of the signs of a Bibliomaniac is the compulsion to buy more and more books, even though you lack space, have no money, and can't possibly read all of them.)
ReplyDeleteWalker, at least in one aspect e-books are better than physical books. When i buy a new batch, I don't have to smuggle them home and hide them.
ReplyDeletePhysical books still have more memories associated with them, though, and the sight and smell of one can bring them all back. Choices, choices...