Elizabeth Cooke was an English silversmith.
[2] She registered her own mark on 24 January 1764; classed as a smallworker, she lived in Foster Lane.
A George III salver of 1767 is owned by the National Museum of Women in the Arts.
[1] She is known to have been alive as late as 23 September 1773, as at that date she is mentioned as the main beneficiary in the will of her brother-in-law Edward Cooke.
[2] This article about an artist, architect or photographer from England is a stub.