Hutting was born on April 17, 1828 in
Southampton, New York, the son of Henry Huntting and Harriet Sayre. His paternal grandfather was Col.
Benjamin Huntting, a merchant and a member of the
New York State Senate. Huntting attended the district schools until he was 12, followed by the Southampton Academy until he was 17. He then went to
Sag Harbor to learn the
cooper's trade. He went on his first whaling voyage as cooper and second mate. On his second voyage, he was mate of the
Jefferson under the command of his brother James R. Hutting. On his third voyage, he was captain of the
Charles Carroll and made several cruises to the Arctic. He later commanded the
Jefferson. In 1863, while commanding the
Pacific, he encountered a gale that damaged the ship and made a return to port necessary. He returned to Sag Harbor in 1864, after which he never sailed again. and
1889. He lost the 1886 election to Henry Augustus Reeves. In the 1889 session, he was Chairman of the Committee on Commerce and Navigation. In the Assembly, he introduced and helped pass a bill that annexed
Lloyd's Neck to Suffolk County. He never again held public office after retiring from the Assembly, but he remained active with the Republican Party. Huntting died at home from pneumonia on February 17, 1903. He was buried in the Old Bridgehampton Cemetery. == References ==