BIO: Frank Reed COOKER, Clearfield County, PA
 
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From Twentieth Century History of Clearfield County, Pennsylvania,
and Representative Citizens, by Roland D. Swoope, Jr.,
Chicago: Richmond-Arnold Publishing Company, 1911, pages 884 & 885.
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  FRANK REED COOKER,* a well known agriculturist of Clearfield County, Pa., who 
is carrying on operations on his excellent farm of seventy acres situated in 
Huston Township, near the Elk County line, was born in Philadelphia, Pa., March 
4, 1846, a son of Samuel and Lydia (Reed) Cooker.
  Samuel Cooker, whose parents were born in Holland, was born near Philadelphia, 
and in that city was for a long period the proprietor of a store.  In 1850 he 
went with a party of men from the Quaker City overland to California in search 
of gold, and eventually lost track of his children, all of whom had been bound 
out young to his different relatives.  His wife died at Pennsburg, Montgomery 
County, at the age of sixty-five years.  The children of Samuel and Lydia (Reed) 
Cooker were:  Lucinda, who married Noah Grove, both no being deceased; William, 
a member of Company C, 51st Pa. Vol. Inf., who lost his life in the battle of 
Petersburg; Benjamin, a member of the same company and regiment, who died at 
Andersonville Prison; Harry, who was also a soldier in a Pennsylvania regiment; 
Emma, who married William Hutt of Philadelphia; Hannah, who married William Reed 
of Philadelphia; Frank R.; two who died young; and Samuel, who resides in Huston 
Township.
  When he was but a boy, Frank R. Cooker was put on a farm in lower Montgomery 
County, and he worked thereon until his enlistment, in June, 1862, in Company A, 
138th Reg., Pa. Vol. Inf., under Captain Fisher, and he served three years, 
being mustered out at the end of the war at Harrisburg.  He served his country 
like a brave soldier and in the long marches, skirmishes and battles proved 
himself a cheerful and reliable comrade.  After the war had closed he went back 
to Montgomery County, and in 1867 located in Clearfield County, which was then 
still heavily timbered.  He worked for a time for old David Horning, and then 
for quite a period rented farms, but eventually, in 1878, he purchased his 
present farm from J. B. Hewett.  At that time there was only a house located on 
this property, but Mr. Cooker has made all the necessary improvements, and has 
his land cleared and well cultivated, making it one of the finest tracts of its 
size in the township.  The B. & S. Railroad runs on the south and east 
boundaries of Mr. Cooker's farm, this being the Bennett's Branch division of 
that line.
  On March 14, 1877, Mr. Cooker was married to Miss Selinda Hewitt, daughter of 
J. B. Hewitt and granddaughter of Ebenezer Hewitt, one of the pioneers of 
Clearfield County.  Mrs. Cooker died in 1890, having been the mother of two 
children, namely:  Harry, who married Nora Reeda and is living with his father; 
and Irving, who married Gertrude Hadley, by whom he has had a daughter, 
Beatrice, and is residing at Latrobe, Pa.  Mr. Cooker is a member of the Grange 
and a popular comrade of the G. A. R.  He is a Republican in politics.