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Robert Fulton Cutting

Robert Fulton Cutting, was an American financier and philanthropist known as "the first citizen of New York." Cutting and his brother William started the sugar beet industry in the United States in 1888.

Early life
Cutting was born in New York City on June 27, 1852. He was the second son of Fulton Cutting (1816–1875) and Elise Justine (née Bayard) Cutting (1823–1852). Both brothers, through their mother, were direct descendants of William Bayard Jr, a close friend of Alexander Hamilton. The fireplace mantle beside which Hamilton supposedly died is now in the Mayor of New York City’s Mansion. His paternal grandparents were William Cutting (1773–1820) and Gertrude Livingston (1778–1864), the sister of Henry Walter Livingston, a U.S. Representative from New York, and the daughter of Walter Livingston, the 1st Speaker of the New York State Assembly. He was the nephew of Francis Brockholst Cutting, His maternal grandfather, Robert Bayard, was Robert Fulton's partner. Cutting and Fulton were brothers-in-law who had married Livingston sisters. Cutting direct ancestors included members from the Stuyvesant, Bayard, Schuyler and Van Cortlandt families of colonial New York. Cutting graduated from Columbia University. ==Career==
Career
In 1888, Cutting and his brother William started the sugar beet industry in the United States. Society life and philanthropy Cutting was a member of the Century Club, City Club of New York, and the Tuxedo Club, among others. was a member of the highly prestigious “400.” == Personal life ==
Personal life
] Cutting was married twice. His first marriage was to Nathalie Charlotte Pendleton Schenck (1852–1875) on June 9, 1874. She was the daughter of Noah Hunt Schenck and Anna Pierce (née Pendleton) Schenck, and the sister of Anna Pendleton Schenck, who established the first female architectural firm in New York City along with Marcia Mead. She died a year after their marriage, and they were the parents of one son: After her death, he married secondly to Helen Suydam (1858–1919), the daughter of Charles Suydam and Anna White (née Schermerhorn) Suydam, on January 25, 1883. His wife was the sister of Walter Lispenard Suydam, the granddaughter of Abraham Schermerhorn, and the niece of Caroline Schermerhorn, who was married to William Backhouse Astor Jr. Together, they were the parents of: • Helen Suydam Cutting (1883–1971), who married Lucius Kellogg Wilmerding Jr. (1880–1949). • Elisabeth McEvers Cutting (b. 1885), She later married Neville Jay Booker. • Robert Fulton Cutting (1886–1967), who married Mary Josephine Amory (1887–1971) in 1914. • Charles Suydam Cutting (1889–1972), • Ruth Hunter Cutting (1896–1948), who married Reginald LaGrange Auchincloss (1891–1984), brother of U.S. Representative James Coats Auchincloss. In 1884, he purchased 724 Fifth Avenue along "Vanderbilt Row" as a home for his family in Manhattan. In 1895, however, Cutting purchased property further uptown and hired Ernest Flagg to design a new residence located at 24 East 67th Street, at the corner of Madison Avenue. He also acquired a home in 1889 in the exclusive Tuxedo Park community, a large residence designed by Bruce Price in 1887 and located on Tower Hill Road at the intersection of Clubhouse Road and Serpentine Road. Cutting died at the age of 82 at his home in Tuxedo Park on September 21, 1934. His funeral, attended by over 500 people, was held at St. Georges. He was buried at Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn, New York. Following his death, Dr. William Jay Schieffelin paid tribute to Cutting during a radio address, stating "Robert Fulton Cutting devoted his life to advance social justice; he early saw that voters should disregard national parties in selecting city officers. New York owes much to his leadership in creating a prevailing public opinion in favor of non-partisan government. He have his devoted service and generous support to the Committee of Seventy, the City Club, the Bureau of Municipal Research and the Citizens Union--of which he was the first chairman." == Notes ==
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