David Sumner Cutler, 66, of Duxbury, founder of Mariner Newspapers and publisher of the Duxbury Clipper, died Sunday, Feb. 28, after a seven-month fight against cancer. He died surrounded by his family in his favorite spot - a fire-placed living room framed by hand-hewn 18th century Duxbury timbers. Mr. Cutler was a son of John Henry Cutler and Roberta Sumner Cutler. He and his twin sister were born on the Fourth of July, 1943, in Olathe, Kan., where his father was stationed with the Navy. In 1945, the Cutlers settled in Duxbury year-round. An important turning point in David Cutler's life came at not yet seven, when over a bridge game at a neighbors home, his parents let themselves be publicly goaded into promising to start a respectable newspaper in Duxbury. Nineteen days later, May 11, 1950, the inaugural edition of the Duxbury Clipper appeared. In the first, sometimes tenuous, years of the Clipper's existence, the observant young Mr. Cutler was absorbing every aspect of the newspaper business in the most intimate and practical way. In September 1957, Mr. Cutler entered the Class of 1961 at Holderness, a boarding school in Plymouth, N.H., where he was captain of both football and baseball. He went on to Colby College in Maine, where he was again captain of the football team. Upon graduating in 1965, Mr. Cutler went to work at The Patriot Ledger as a beat reporter covering the towns of Abington, Whitman and Rockland. Fifteen months later, Mr. Cutler requested and was granted a three-year leave of absence to join the U.S. Marines. In January 1967, he went on active duty and entered Officer Candidate School in Quantico, Va. After six more months of advanced training, Lt. Cutler was sent to Vietnam, where he became commander of a company stationed near the Demilitarized Zone. On a night in March 1968, Mr. Cutler was pinned down while trying to rescue one of his men. A North Vietnamese sniper bullet went through both legs. There was every chance that he would bleed to death before daylight. But one of the men pinned down with him applied a tourniquet. He survived the night and was rescued by helicopter after sunrise. For his valor he received a Purple Heart and was later promoted to captain. Mr. Cutler's beat reporting had impressed his editors and when he returned to The Patriot Ledger in 1970, he was appointed the paper's State House reporter. For the next two years he plied the halls, covering the administration of Gov. Francis Sargent. In 1972, Mr. Cutler left the security of his position at The Ledger to found The Marshfield Mariner with $1,000 in vacation pay and a small investment by his partner, Michael Stearns. The Mariner was inaugurated April 13, 1972, and immediately became Marshfield's paper of record, richly chronicling the towns births, deaths and much of what happened in between. Two years later, The Norwell Mariner appeared, and over the next dozen years, papers sprouted in Scituate, Cohasset and Pembroke, eventually spreading as far north to Braintree and south to Plymouth. While the growing company eventually prospered, there were days when Davids primary meals were snacks he pilfered from his own vending machines. Along the way he learned a few lessons about the business side of the newspaper business, among them to avoid carrying company checkbooks around in a green garbage bag as they were once tossed in the dumpster by a diligent cleaning woman. When Mr. Cutler sold the company to Capital Cities/ABC for $8 million in 1989, Mariner Newspapers boasted 17 community weeklies and 95 full-time employees. The sale came with a five-year contract to continue to run Mariner Newspapers. He would now learn something about the corporate world, which in the end, reminded him too much of military service in a stateside post to be to his long-term taste. As was said in Roman times, better to command a village than be number two in Rome. A fruit of the Capital Cities/ABC period was the respect Mr. Cutler had for his immediate corporate boss, John Coots, who, by and by, had had enough of Rome and the two decided to become partners and purchased a group of six struggling newspapers in Worcester County. With his partner focused on the business side, Mr. Cutler found himself in the familiar role of community publisher, but this time the challenge was one of turn-around artist. And turn-around they did. After steering the flagship daily, The Southbridge Evening News, back to health, Mr. Cutler and Mr. Coots grew the company through expansion while maintaining the relentlessly local credo Mr. Cutler learned in the early days folding Clippers in his parents living room. Today, Stonebridge Press and its sister company, Salmon Press, now publish one daily and 23 weekly newspapers across three states with nearly 100 full-time employees. Mr. Cutler had no formal training in business, accounting or human resources and often boasted that hed never taken a journalism course, yet he grew into all these roles, never forgetting the business was, and is, always about people. In the end, he was beloved by those people who had worked so closely with him over five decades and three states. Mr. Cutler was a voracious reader, especially of history, biography and politics. He was a brilliant conversationalist, who could hold his own with the assorted presidential candidates who came calling in New Hampshire every four years. He was passionate about fishing, tennis and a good game of chess. For all the native competitiveness that fired the newspaperman, Mr. Cutler's greatest passion was his family. The love and support of his wife and children during his final illness enhanced his natural inclination to look at death with equanimity. Early in his illness, he said to an old friend, My life's work was my family and I've succeeded. David leaves his wife, the Rev. Catherine Cullen of Duxbury; sisters, Margaret Chandler of Maryland and Gail Cutler of Pembroke; sons, Josh S. Cutler of Duxbury, Benjamin D. Cutler of New York and Jonathan M. Cullen of West Roxbury; daughters, Carolyn M. Cutler of Georgia, Rebecca W. Cutler of Duxbury and Amanda C. Benard of Hingham; as well as seven grandchildren. Visiting hours will be Wednesday, March 3, from 4 to 8 p.m. at Shepherd Funeral Home, 216 Main St., Kingston. A graveside service at Mayflower Cemetery will be held Thursday, March 4, at 10 a.m. A memorial service in celebration of Mr. Cutlers life will be held Saturday, March 13, at 5 p.m. at First Parish Church in Duxbury. In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to the Cutler Family Memorial Scholarship Fund in care of the Trustees of Partridge Academy, P.O. Box 2552, Duxbury, MA 02331.
Published in The Patriot Ledger on 3/2/2010
David Sumner Cutler, 66, of Duxbury, founder of Mariner Newspapers and publisher of the Duxbury Clipper, died Sunday, Feb. 28, after a seven-month fight against cancer. He died surrounded by his family in his favorite spot - a fire-placed living room framed by hand-hewn 18th century Duxbury timbers. Mr. Cutler was a son of John Henry Cutler and Roberta Sumner Cutler. He and his twin sister were born on the Fourth of July, 1943, in Olathe, Kan., where his father was stationed with the Navy. In 1945, the Cutlers settled in Duxbury year-round. An important turning point in David Cutler's life came at not yet seven, when over a bridge game at a neighbors home, his parents let themselves be publicly goaded into promising to start a respectable newspaper in Duxbury. Nineteen days later, May 11, 1950, the inaugural edition of the Duxbury Clipper appeared. In the first, sometimes tenuous, years of the Clipper's existence, the observant young Mr. Cutler was absorbing every aspect of the newspaper business in the most intimate and practical way. In September 1957, Mr. Cutler entered the Class of 1961 at Holderness, a boarding school in Plymouth, N.H., where he was captain of both football and baseball. He went on to Colby College in Maine, where he was again captain of the football team. Upon graduating in 1965, Mr. Cutler went to work at The Patriot Ledger as a beat reporter covering the towns of Abington, Whitman and Rockland. Fifteen months later, Mr. Cutler requested and was granted a three-year leave of absence to join the U.S. Marines. In January 1967, he went on active duty and entered Officer Candidate School in Quantico, Va. After six more months of advanced training, Lt. Cutler was sent to Vietnam, where he became commander of a company stationed near the Demilitarized Zone. On a night in March 1968, Mr. Cutler was pinned down while trying to rescue one of his men. A North Vietnamese sniper bullet went through both legs. There was every chance that he would bleed to death before daylight. But one of the men pinned down with him applied a tourniquet. He survived the night and was rescued by helicopter after sunrise. For his valor he received a Purple Heart and was later promoted to captain. Mr. Cutler's beat reporting had impressed his editors and when he returned to The Patriot Ledger in 1970, he was appointed the paper's State House reporter. For the next two years he plied the halls, covering the administration of Gov. Francis Sargent. In 1972, Mr. Cutler left the security of his position at The Ledger to found The Marshfield Mariner with $1,000 in vacation pay and a small investment by his partner, Michael Stearns. The Mariner was inaugurated April 13, 1972, and immediately became Marshfield's paper of record, richly chronicling the towns births, deaths and much of what happened in between. Two years later, The Norwell Mariner appeared, and over the next dozen years, papers sprouted in Scituate, Cohasset and Pembroke, eventually spreading as far north to Braintree and south to Plymouth. While the growing company eventually prospered, there were days when Davids primary meals were snacks he pilfered from his own vending machines. Along the way he learned a few lessons about the business side of the newspaper business, among them to avoid carrying company checkbooks around in a green garbage bag as they were once tossed in the dumpster by a diligent cleaning woman. When Mr. Cutler sold the company to Capital Cities/ABC for $8 million in 1989, Mariner Newspapers boasted 17 community weeklies and 95 full-time employees. The sale came with a five-year contract to continue to run Mariner Newspapers. He would now learn something about the corporate world, which in the end, reminded him too much of military service in a stateside post to be to his long-term taste. As was said in Roman times, better to command a village than be number two in Rome. A fruit of the Capital Cities/ABC period was the respect Mr. Cutler had for his immediate corporate boss, John Coots, who, by and by, had had enough of Rome and the two decided to become partners and purchased a group of six struggling newspapers in Worcester County. With his partner focused on the business side, Mr. Cutler found himself in the familiar role of community publisher, but this time the challenge was one of turn-around artist. And turn-around they did. After steering the flagship daily, The Southbridge Evening News, back to health, Mr. Cutler and Mr. Coots grew the company through expansion while maintaining the relentlessly local credo Mr. Cutler learned in the early days folding Clippers in his parents living room. Today, Stonebridge Press and its sister company, Salmon Press, now publish one daily and 23 weekly newspapers across three states with nearly 100 full-time employees. Mr. Cutler had no formal training in business, accounting or human resources and often boasted that hed never taken a journalism course, yet he grew into all these roles, never forgetting the business was, and is, always about people. In the end, he was beloved by those people who had worked so closely with him over five decades and three states. Mr. Cutler was a voracious reader, especially of history, biography and politics. He was a brilliant conversationalist, who could hold his own with the assorted presidential candidates who came calling in New Hampshire every four years. He was passionate about fishing, tennis and a good game of chess. For all the native competitiveness that fired the newspaperman, Mr. Cutler's greatest passion was his family. The love and support of his wife and children during his final illness enhanced his natural inclination to look at death with equanimity. Early in his illness, he said to an old friend, My life's work was my family and I've succeeded. David leaves his wife, the Rev. Catherine Cullen of Duxbury; sisters, Margaret Chandler of Maryland and Gail Cutler of Pembroke; sons, Josh S. Cutler of Duxbury, Benjamin D. Cutler of New York and Jonathan M. Cullen of West Roxbury; daughters, Carolyn M. Cutler of Georgia, Rebecca W. Cutler of Duxbury and Amanda C. Benard of Hingham; as well as seven grandchildren. Visiting hours will be Wednesday, March 3, from 4 to 8 p.m. at Shepherd Funeral Home, 216 Main St., Kingston. A graveside service at Mayflower Cemetery will be held Thursday, March 4, at 10 a.m. A memorial service in celebration of Mr. Cutlers life will be held Saturday, March 13, at 5 p.m. at First Parish Church in Duxbury. In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to the Cutler Family Memorial Scholarship Fund in care of the Trustees of Partridge Academy, P.O. Box 2552, Duxbury, MA 02331.
Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/48990642/david_sumner-cutler: accessed
), memorial page for David Sumner Cutler (4 Jul 1943–28 Feb 2010), Find a Grave Memorial ID 48990642, citing Mayflower Cemetery, Duxbury,
Plymouth County,
Massachusetts,
USA;
Maintained by Carol Bestick (contributor 46991759).
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