Cutler School (New York City)

In November 1894 a Harvard-Yale football game called the “Bloodbath at Hampden Park” took place.

A number of Cutler graduates were involved in Harvard football at the time, and Theodore Roosevelt was advocating for the suspension to be lifted.

In 1895 Arthur Cutler was named the President of the Schoolmaster's Association of New York and he lobbied to restore the game, and invited Walter Camp to speak to the Schoolmaster's Association of New York about the importance of athletics to the development of young men.

In 1900 Arthur Cutler was the temporary chairman who presided over the founding of the New York Interscholastic Athletic Association.

The majority of Cutler graduates entered Harvard, Columbia, Yale, and Princeton, the numbers being in the order named.

She arose early in the morning and used a match to light the gas logs in the fireplace on the first floor of her home.

Her husband was asleep on the second floor of the house and didn't become aware of the incident until a policeman awoke him and advised him that his wife had been taken to Flower Hospital.

On June 21, 1918, the last day of the 1917–1918 school year, Dr. Arthur Hamilton Cutler died at his home from a cerebral venous sinus thrombosis.