High Street Cemetery · Hingham, Massachusetts

James K Tuttle

22 Apr 1834 – 11 Oct 1906 · about 72 years

From the burial index · with sourced details below

Go to this stone High Street Cemetery, South Hingham, Massachusetts. The stone is still there. Its exact spot in the ground is not yet recorded, so begin at the gate and read the markers. Find your way → Find a Grave record ↗

James K Tuttle lived from 22 Apr 1834 to 11 Oct 1906, a span of about 72 years.

Theirs is one of 14 markers bearing the name Tuttle in this ground: kin, or several families, gathered together.

View family network 11relatives, as recorded on Find a Grave
James Tuttle1780–1847also hereMargaret "Peggy" Calley Quackow Tuttle1796–1866also here
James K Tuttlem.Henrietta Simpson Tuttle1840–1921also here
Mary A Tuttle1860–1942also hereRussell Tuttle1864–1926also here

SiblingsJohn Tuttle1810–1886 · Lucretia Leonard1818–1904 · Betsey Tuttle1837–1900 · Andrew J. Tuttle1842–1894

Relationships are as recorded on Find a Grave.

A 1893 History of Hingham entry, likely this person uncertain match

The 1893 genealogies repeat many names; this is matched exact birth date, found in the Trowbridge family genealogy (read as a lead), corroborated by a relative's name and may be a different person of the same name. Read it as a lead, not a certainty.

The entry, as printed
foil. Child, — i. Daniel, Aug. 30, 1640. James King (James = Margaret Lurnard), b. in Hing. Apr. 22, 1834. m. Nov. 23, 1857, Henrietta Simpson, dau. of George and Eliza (Freeman) Simpson. She was b. in Hing. Dec. 31, 1840. " Shoemaker." Resides on Ward St. Ch., b. in Hing., — i. Walter Thomas, Apr. 9, 1859. ii. Mary Abby, March 23, 1860. iii. Edward Russell, Oct. 13, 1861.

1893 History of Hingham, Vol. II–III (Genealogical). Read on archive.org ↗

A photograph of the marker survives; see it on Find a Grave ↗.

This is what the record holds so far: gathered, sourced, and still growing. There is more of James's life to recover, and some of what is shown above is matched, not certain. A correction or a family memory is a gift; submit a source, correction, or memory.