Inscription
The Martha Cook Building first housed women students of the University of Michigan in 1915. New York lawyer William W. Cook, a Michigan alumnus, donated the building. The Collegiate Gothic residence was named for Cook’s mother, Martha W. Cook. New York architects York and Sawyer designed this building as well as the university Law Quadrangle, one of Cook’s later donations. Paul Suttman’s garden statue, known as “Eve,” was a fiftieth anniversary gift of the building’s alumnae.
[Back]: A statue of Portia, the heroine of Shakespeare’s The Merchant of Venice, stands above the entrance of the Martha Cook Building. Gothic groin vaults frame the ground floor hallway, which houses a full-sized marble replica of the Venus de Milo. The Red Room, which connects to the Gold Room by a paneled alcove, displays a seventeenth century Flemish tapestry. William W. Cook’s Steinway piano, commissioned in 1913, as well as a bust of Cook are exhibited in the Gold Room.
Location
Sources
More markers in Washtenaw
Central Title Service Building
Ann Arbor, MI
On August 6, 1845, the first graduation ceremony for the University of Michigan was held in this building, which was then the First...
John Wesley Conant House
Salem Township, MI
John W. and Alice Conant of New York purchased land near Denton in 1833, and built this house soon after.
Manchester Township Library
Manchester, MI
In 1838, one year after Michigan attained statehood, Manchester Township established its library, one of the first township libraries in...
St. Thomas the Apostle Church
Ann Arbor, MI
In 1831 Father Patrick O’Kelly came from Detroit to minister to the Irish Catholics in the Washtenaw area.
Hudson Mills
Dexter, MI
This hamlet developed around the mills which were located here to utilize the great water power of the Huron River.
