 |
| Classic Cook
roasted by Browne & Stuck |
 |
| Librarian at junior
college amassed overwhelming evidence, of the
previously established fact, that Frederick Cook was a
fraud. |
|
The name Fred Cook,
AKA "Dr. Cook" still clutters the history books because
a trust fund is paid to do so. Cook was an 1880's Brooklyn milkman
who added "doctor" to his name after a scant 2 years of medical study
who never made a profession of medicine. Instead Cook was twice a polar volunteer, then twice
tried to arrange "Arctic tours" before going completely
criminal. Fred was only a
travel writer and photographer who sold his self-serving (but faked)
adventure stories to magazines, newspapers, and book
publishers. Only his daughter's Vetters vendetta trust fund
pretends he was an explorer. • Cook stole a
missionary's life work and published it under his own name, • Cook bribed
a guide to go along with his fraudulent claim of being first to climb Mt. McKinley in 1906, then
• Cook faked a
trip to the North Pole in 1908 just before Peary's expedition
returned from that accomplishment. Fred sold his tales of fraud to
newspapers, magazines, and lecture audiences in the days before TV
and radio—thus earning millions of dollars.


Some people today are still confused
about this
career con artist—even the
History Channel, because his vindictive, tireless
troublemaker daughter, created a $1,000,000
Vetters vendetta trust fund that fuels the tax exempt
Cook Society
which runs a website, publishes the dead doctors phony
books, maintains an anti-Peary newsletter, etc. All of this perpetuates a
cult about Dr. Cook that feeds upon gullible individuals—dupes
who are made to think that there is a "Peary conspiracy"
against Cook, when in fact, there is a virtual Peary vendetta
carried on by the trust fund of Janet Vetters.

Travel writer, not explorer—it
is a myth that he
was an explorer. Cook merely freeloaded (volunteered) on other men's
expeditions (1-winter in Greenland, and 1-winter on a ship stuck in
Antarctica) or used other people's money to
organize a couple of tour groups to Greenland that both ended
prematurely in failure. He married a rich widow and used her money, plus
that of others, to go camping in Alaska in 1903. His attempt to climb
McKinley was so amateurish, his leadership so poor that a tour group
member, reporter Robert Dunn, wrote a damning article about the
misadventure. His book is a classic and still in print.
 |
|
|
(above) Fred's phony land discovery. Proof of fraud just doesn't get any
stronger than a faked photo. See the
faked map
with non-existent land. Fred got ratted out by the Eskimo guides who
weren't as stupid as he thought they were. |

Without Dunn watching him, Fred went
back to Mt. McKinley in 1906, this time bribing his guide to say he
was the first person to climb the 20,300 ft. mountain. Cook was praised
as a hero due to his self-promotional skills and soon was the president
of several New York clubs and a well paid lecturer. In 1907 he knew that
if he acted fast he could do another scam like McKinley by claiming he
reached the North Pole ahead of Robert E. Peary's 1909 expedition. He
went north on a millionaire's yacht, then disappeared for a year to
stage the hoax.

Fred never got within 500 miles of the North Pole.
Most incriminating are
his phony maps and faked photos from his ridiculous 1911
"come-back" book. Fred made fools of his supporters who believed he discovered new
land named after his sponsor, professional gambler
John Bradley. The "Prince of Liars" located his
land hoax where no one had yet explored. When an expedition
proved it didn't exist Fred was serving a 14 year
prison sentence in Leavenworth for
mail fraud.

After the exploring scams backfired Fred wrote a vindictive book
and sold copies at his traveling vaudeville
show 1911–1917. Then he turned to suckering thousands of
poor, rural people with his
Ponzi type oil stock mail fraud that landed him in prison. After parole ended in
1935 he began filing lawsuits against many of his critics but judges
tossed the suits out of court. A vindictive daughter carried on
Cook's vendetta. |
|
|
| |
 |
 |
|
1909 Newspaper cartoon ridiculed Fred's phony North
Pole claim. |
|