Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900/Cooke, William Bernard
COOKE, WILLIAM BERNARD (1778–1855), line engraver, was born in London in 1778. He was the elder brother of George Cooke [q. v.], and became a pupil of William Angus, the engraver of the ‘Seats of the Nobility and Gentry in Great Britain and Wales.’ After the termination of his apprenticeship he obtained employment upon the plates for Brewer's ‘Beauties of England and Wales,’ and then undertook the publication of ‘The Thames,’ which was completed in 1811, and for which he engraved almost all the plates. His most important work was the ‘Picturesque Views on the Southern Coast of England,’ chiefly from drawings by Turner, which he produced between 1814 and 1826, conjointly with his brother, George Cooke, and for which he executed no less than twenty-two plates, besides many vignettes. He also engraved after Turner ‘The Source of the Tamar’ and ‘Plymouth,’ and in 1819 five plates of ‘Views in Sussex,’ which were published with explanatory notices by R. R. Reinagle. Besides these he engraved ‘Storm clearing off,’ after Copley Fielding, for the ‘Gallery of the Society of Painters in Water Colours,’ 1833, as well as plates for Rhodes's ‘Peak Scenery,’ 1818, De Wint's ‘Views in the South of France, chiefly on the Rhone,’ 1825, Cockburn's ‘Pompeii,’ 1827, Stanfield's ‘Coast Scenery,’ 1836, Noel Humphreys's ‘Rome and its surrounding Scenery,’ 1840, and other works. He likewise published ‘A new Picture of the Isle of Wight,’ 1812, and ‘Twenty-four select Views in Italy,’ 1833. He was an engraver of considerable ability, and excelled especially in marine views, but the works which he published did not meet with much success. He died at Camberwell, of heart disease, 2 Aug. 1855, aged 77.
[Gent. Mag. 1855, ii. 334; Art Journal, 1855, p. 267; Redgrave's Dict. of Artists of the English School, 1878.]