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Students paint the inside of a room.
Four male Storer students pose for a portrait on the steps of a building.
Four male Storer students pose for a portrait on a snowy day.
Isabelle Stewart, Raymond McNeal, and Odetta Johnson sit on the lawn at school holding a school pennant.
Two female student stand next to male student wearing a letterman sweater.
Male and female student looking to the left.
Male and female student in profile.
Male and female students in formal clothing.
Male and female students posed for a portrait.
A male and female student pose for a portrait.
Students sewing in Home Economics.
A female and male student.  Male is wearing a letterman sweater.
A male and female student stand outside looking at papers in a file together.
Girls holding on to streamers at May Day celebration.
Born in Lexington, Virginia in 1861 to enslaved parents, Cook attended Storer College in Harper's Ferry, West Virginia, graduating in 1880 and later served on the Storer faculty as an assistant professor. Cook was also active in the NAACP and involved in the inner circles of the NAWSA, working for the passage of the 19th amendment.
From left to right in the upper row standing is Robert Trent, Portia Lovett, Mary Ella Dixon, and Charlie Hale. Sitting from left to right is Walter Johnson, Alberta Redmond, Hamilton Keys, and Marcia Lovett. First concert was given in Buffalo, N.Y., May 2, 1873. They gave 40 concerts in the principal cities between Buffalo and Utica, going home, July 5, 1873.