Cutler Genealogy   by  George F cheap cialis. Cutler Jr online pharmacy viagra.
     
             

SOME of the first CUTLER's in America were:

Robert Cutler, 1608, Jamestown, Va viagra.                     
James Cutler, 1634, Watertown, Mass online pharmacy.
Robert Cutler, 1636, Charlestown, Mass viagra online.
John Cutler, 1637, Hingham, Mass cialis
Richard Cutler, 1671, Accomack Co., Va.
John Cutler, 1674, Hingham, Mass.             
Edmund Cutler (Jr), 1685, Bucks Co., Pa.
John Cutler, 1685, Bucks Co., Pa.     (xxx)              
Benjamin Cutler, before 1800, New York
                   
       georgecutler@juno.com
March 10th, 1702, John Cutler (xxx)
brother to Edmund, was appointed Bucks County Surveyor. He surveyed and recorded the split of Buckingham & Sorebury, and re-mapped Bristol, Newtown, Middletown, etc.
     
  I have the book; "Cutler Memorial & History" written in 1887
                 I can do reference look-ups from this book
       January 20, 2009
       August 19, 1775
David Palmer Cutler was a  Private, Lower Makefield Company,  Bucks County Associators  during the        Revolutionary War.
His brother John & his nine children, migrated from Bucks County  to Ontario Canada in 1789 and was an early Quaker settler on the Niagara Peninsula.
click here for Bucks Co site
               JOHN BAILEY CUTLER   1839 - 1910
                   Fallsington, Bucks County, Pa.
  The Philadelphia Inquirer carried the following story
                                 Feb. 25, 1910
               DRIVER AND HORSE KILLED BY CARS
Fallsington man met death on the railroad tracks at the Wheatsheaf crossing: Bailey Cutler, who resided all his life in the village of Fallsington, was struck by a fast express on the Pennsylvania Railroad at the Wheatsheaf Crossing on Monday afternoon at about 6 o'clock and was killed instantly. His horse was also killed and his wagon demolished. There was no flagman at the crossing. It was foggy at the time. Mr. Cutler, whose hearing was defective, was returning from the public sale of William Brown on the old Minor Irving farm in Penn's Manor. He had purchased a few articles at the sale which he placed in his wagon and started home at about 5 o'clock. He was alone at the time. When the aged man arrived at the crossing he was unaware that a train was approaching a short distance away. He could not hear the noise of the train, and drove slowly over the rails. The horse had no sooner stepped on the tracks than the locomotive attached to the west bound train struck it. Cutler was thrown a great distance and was probably dead when his crushed body landed on a nearby lot. The horse was thrown some distance and killed instantly. The Engineer of the train did not know that his engine had struck a man until he saw his body flying in the air. The train was traveling at the rate of a mile a minute, and was brought to a stop.
                        
     *May 31, 1862.*
William Cutler lost his life at the Battle of Fair Oaks, Va.
       William was our        gggrandfather's (John S. Cutler) nephew and a Private in the Union Army. John and 2 of his sons also served.   
      I do look ups
  
Bucks County, Pa:
1-Early Church   
   Records
2-Wills 1685-1825
3-Early Land Records
4-Tax Records
   1693-1778
a-Nottingham Quakers
   1680 - 1889
b-Ontario Canada
   Early Quakers
c-Burlington Co, NJ-
   Early Church
   Records.
d-Phila. City Directory-
   1887-1893.
e-Quaker Encyclopedia of Genealogy, Pa & NJ.

  CUTLER COUSINS, LETS SHARE          INFORMATION ON THE FAMILY.
    GENEALOGY RESEARCH
* A print out of approx. 10-11 generations, starting in 1575,  of my Cutler line, is available for $29.95 + shipping. (Approx 85-100 pages)
Includes personal family stories & some interesting family connections.
CUTLER's; Philadelphia, PA. Edgewood, Fallsington, Trevose, Morrisville, Bristol, Oakford, in Bucks Co., plus Lancaster Co, & New Jersey, Ohio            Ontario, Canada.

Because of a few sicko's I have had to put an end to the guest book signings.
 
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