Honoree

Bill Cook
AWARDS
  • Honorary Degree (1993)
  • LL.D.
  • DOCTOR OF LAWS
  • LOCATION: Bloomington
  • PRESENTER: Thomas Ehrlich
  • President's Medal for Excellence (2010)
  • LOCATION: Bloomington
  • PRESENTER: Michael A. McRobbie

BIOGRAPHY
An international leader in the manufacture of medical equipment, William Cook is also a leader in his own community. As the founder and president of Cook, Inc., one of the largest medical device companies in the world, Mr. Cook oversees facilities in the United States, Australia, Denmark, and Canada. As a benefactor to those who live, work, and study in Monroe County, in Bloomington, and at Indiana University, Mr. Cook strives to improve the quality of our lives in countless ways. In 1963 William A. Cook began Cook, Inc., in his family apartment in Bloomington. He combined the biological knowledge gained at Northwestern University with his U.S. Army training in operating room technology and his experience in a Chicago medical company, and he applied them to the creation of innovative, life-saving devices.

Today Cook subsidiaries produce such necessities as heart catheters, needles, urological supplies, medical pipettes, and heart pacemakers. Many physicians have praised Mr. Cook's ingenuity and his ability to provide practical solutions to medical problems. Committed to encouraging a healthy, productive way of life for people of all ages and abilities, Mr. Cook has increased opportunities for personal and physical development with his generous support of local organizations, ranging from the Monroe County YMCA to Better Living for Special People. By sponsoring an award-winning drum and bugle corps, the Star of Indiana, Mr. Cook has taught multitudes of young people how to set ambitious goals and attain them.

Enhancing the physical surroundings for local residents has always been a high priority for Mr. Cook. In partnership with his wife, Gayle Cook, Bill Cook has been instrumental in the preservation of many treasured historic sites, in Bloomington and elsewhere in the state. Bloomington's Courthouse Square owes much of its picturesque beauty to the efforts of the Cooks.

Indiana University has also benefited from Mr. Cook's generosity. He has endowed a scholarship in the Wells Scholars Program and given substantial research funding to the College of Arts and Sciences and the Schools of Business, Education, Medicine, and Music. He provided new band uniforms for IU's "Marching Hundred" and donated the lights at Memorial Stadium.

Mr. Cook has received numerous awards for his service to his fellow citizens, including an honorary Doctorate of Engineering from Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology in 1992.