
Living the spirit of LR
Visitors to Grace Chapel may recognize the name Mary Lou Cooke Hall 鈥43 as the author of the guidebook for the chapel鈥檚 many windows. In addition to her role as a stained-glass historian, Hall has filled the nearly 80 years since graduation with adventure and public service.

鈥淟ife has been very interesting for me, and I just keep on going,鈥 shared the retired teacher, church leader, entertainer, wife, mother and world traveler who celebrated her 100th birthday on March 22, 2023.
A different 100th birthday celebration led Hall into the world of stained-glass history. A longtime member of Moseley Memorial United Methodist Church in Danville, Virginia, Hall began giving tours of the building鈥檚 iconic windows around the time of the church鈥檚 centennial anniversary, in 1993. The tours led Hall to write her first guidebook to stained glass, focused on the Moseley windows, which remain intact in Danville even though the building itself has changed ownership.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a beautiful church with gorgeous windows made by High Point Glass Company,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he images were reproductions of famous paintings. I researched the images, the artists, and the importance of the colors used, and we created a book.鈥
While attending a reunion with her sister at Lenoir-Rhyne soon after Grace Chapel opened its doors in 2014, the two of them explored the building. 鈥淲e walked in on an organ recital, and we sat down to listen,鈥 said Hall.
Noticing the Grace Chapel windows had no explanations attached, Hall first envisioned a brochure, but the project grew into a booklet, which is available in the chapel vestibule.
Childhood and student life
Hall鈥檚 stint as a stained-glass scholar is one chapter of a life filled with adventures great and small. She was born just west of Hickory in Hildebran, North Carolina, to Finley Floyd Cooke and Sarah Lucretia Abernathy Cooke Tomlinson. Her father served as the postmaster for the town of Hildebran until his registration as a political independent cost him his position in the 1930s. Then her mother passed the civil service exam and took over her husband鈥檚 post.
Five of the eight Cooke siblings attended Lenoir-Rhyne. Hall鈥檚 younger brother Charles Cooke, Ph.D., is still here as a professor of physics whose destiny as an LR professor may have been set his freshman year when he was asked to teach a French class while the professors were out with flu.
When Hall graduated from Lenoir-Rhyne in 1943 with a bachelor鈥檚 degree and teaching certification in English, Spanish and social studies, she accepted her first teaching position in Granite Falls, North Carolina.
After a few years in Granite Falls then Reidsville, North Carolina, Hall relocated to Virginia after reading George Washington High School in Danville was one of the top schools in the United States. She would eventually work for Virginia Department of Education, evaluating new teachers statewide as part of certification requirements.
The secret of her professional success traced back to her studies at LR. 鈥淓very job I ever got was because I could speak Spanish,鈥 said Hall.
Mom, entertainer, traveler
In 1951, Hall married Wallace Vann Hall, a U.S. Navy commander who became a car dealer in civilian life in Danville. The couple had two children, one of whom, W. Vann Hall, Jr., translated the early Cyrillic on the icon of Jesus in the Grace Chapel vestibule for Hall鈥檚 booklet.

Hall had been involved with the Playmakers while she was a student at LR, and her interest in the theater continued throughout her years teaching in Danville, including a trip to the Miss Virginia pageant soon after her move there. 鈥淚 was good-looking then,鈥 Hall chuckled.
The arrival of her children brought Hall into the world of children鈥檚 theater, working with the Children鈥檚 Theater of Danville and the Southern Children鈥檚 Theatre Circuit. Most notably, she became one of the puppet performers on 鈥淭he Old Rebel Show,鈥 a popular cowboy-themed children鈥檚 variety show broadcast on WFMY out of Greensboro from 1953 to 1965.
鈥淚 wrote skits and made puppets, and we鈥檇 travel down to Greensboro every week to do a puppet show. That lasted for four years. It was a lot of fun,鈥 said Hall.
The Halls traveled frequently, thanks to Wallace Hall鈥檚 Naval experience, often taking off on an international trip without knowing the destination in advance. On a memorable trip to Morocco, the Halls befriended a director of tourism who invited them to his home for his American wife.
Remembering this adventure that started with an unpredictable outcome, Hall said, 鈥淚鈥檝e learned you never turn down an opportunity.鈥

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