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Ann Turner Cook (born Ann Leslie Turner; November 20, 1926 – June 3, 2022) was an American educator and mystery novelist who was best known as the model for the familiar Gerber Baby artwork, seen on baby food packages of the Gerber Products Company.
Early life and Gerber Baby history
thumb|150px|Examples of the Gerber Baby Artwork
Born in Westport, Connecticut, she was the daughter of Bethel (Burson) and syndicated cartoonist Leslie Turner, who drew the comic strip Captain Easy for decades.<!-- Wikipedia's "Gerber Baby" article says that the contest was announced in the summer of 1928. Wikipedia's "Ann Turner Cook" article says that Cook was five months old in the portrait. Considering that Cook was born on November 20 and five months old, she must have been born before 1928. I could not find a definite answer, so I went to her website: annturnercook.com. She replied with 1926.--> The family's neighbor was the artist Dorothy Hope Smith, who did a charcoal drawing of Ann when she was a baby. In 1928, when Gerber announced it was looking for baby images for its upcoming line of baby food, Smith's drawing was submitted and subsequently chosen. It was trademarked in 1931. The drawing of Ann Turner Cook has since been used on virtually all Gerber baby food packaging. In 1990, Cook appeared as a guest on To Tell the Truth in a one-on-one segment.
Career
Cook taught at Oak Hill elementary school in Florida, and then at Madison Junior High School, in Tampa, Florida. In 1966, she joined the English Department of Tampa's Hillsborough High School, where she eventually rose to being the school's department chairwoman.
After retiring from teaching, Cook became a novelist. A member of the Mystery Writers of America, she was the author of the Brandy O'Bannon series of mystery novels set on Florida's Gulf Coast. The adventures of Florida reporter and amateur sleuth O'Bannon are detailed in Trace Their Shadows (2001) and Shadow over Cedar Key (2003). The latter title received a negative review from Publishers Weekly, which stated the book had “An overly busy plot ... [and] is weighed down with limp prose and repetition.”
Personal life and death
She was married to James Cook, a criminologist with the Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office, until his death in 2004. They had four children.
References
External links
- USF 50th Anniversary—College of Education Philanthropic Activities (with a photo of Ann Turner Cook)
