As we all grow older and hopefully wiser we began to take on the gentle wisdom of phrases like, âLet lying dogs lieâ but Caroline Cutter may have been an exception to this philosophy. You see after her death in the mid 1800âs her husband spent what I can only guess was a decent bit of money on a scathing 150 word headstone that called out several members of the community by name, accusing them of harassing his beloved to literal death.
Basically, this was a petty feud between a church and a couple who once attended services with them. According to the church Carolineâs husband Calvin Cutter was little more than a shyster. They accused him of bullying other church members into helping him fund his own church across town â a church that ultimately was never built. For these grievances they excommunicated both Calvin and Caroline and Caroline apparently took the blow to her reputation very hard and despite her better efforts was never able to get back into the good graces of the church.
After she died Calvin took it upon himself to make her headstone into one of the pettiest monuments ever carved. In it he claimed the excommunication destroyed his wifeâs life, threw her into poverty, and eventually killed her while she was already down. Thatâs quite a bit of drama. Drama I donât even think the town wants over 200 years later as a completely unrelated monument/plaque stands two feet from the stone nearly completely blocking it.
Now I donât know if Calvin really was a naâardowell, nor do I know if Caroline was really as dramatic as her husband. It seems as if social ostracization may have made both of them a little nutty. And maybe, just maybe, dear old Calvin wasnât a grifter but just someone with ADD who let his rejection sensitivity spill over into his grief for his deceased wife. Anything could be possible!
But no matter what you believe the stone still reads thusly, Caroline H., Wife of Calvin Cutter, M.D. Murdered by the Baptist Ministry and Baptist Churches As follows: Sepât. 28, 1838; aged 33 She was accused of lying in church meeting by the Rev. D. D. Pratt and Deacon Albert Adams. Was condemned by the church unheard. She was reduced to poverty by Deacon William Wallace. When an exparte council was asked of the Milford Baptist Church, by the advice of their committee, George Raymond, Calvin Averill, and Andrew Hutchinson They voted not to receive any communication on the subject. The Rev. Mark Carpenter said he thought as the good old Deacon said, âWeâve got Cutter down and itâs best to keep him down.â The intentional and malicious destruction of her character And happiness as above described destroyed her life. Her last words upon the subject were âTell the Truth and The Iniquity will come outâ
This stone is SUPER easy to find, though there is no parking in the cemetery or roadside. I parked at the gas station across the road but I guess thereâs also a park around the corner with even more appropriate parking. The cemetery gates are behind a little park monument out front and should be open if itâs daylight hours. As for Caroline Cutterâs stone â itâs in the first row almost in the center right in front of someoneâs barn and behind another completely unrelated monument.
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