Cuthbert Bullitt
Cuthbert Bullitt (c.1740–1791) was a planter and lawyer from Prince William County, Virginia. He was a local and colonial political leader during the American Revolution.
Bullitt was descended from French Huguenots. Cuthbert was one of the five children of Benjamin and Sarah (Harrison) Bullet. He and his brother Thomas Bullitt both settled in Prince William County and became locally prominent, Cuthbert as a planter, and lawyer and Thomas as a soldier.
Cuthbert Bullitt developed his plantation, known as Mount View on a peninsula where Quantico Creek enters the Potomac River. He married Sarah Sally Evans in the summer of 1761, and he had 10 children. As noted in his last will and testament,Last Will and Testament of Cuthbert Combs found in (Book 3 Book of Wills, Clark Co., KY) His will, filed Clarke Co Kentucky would indicate that he had moved from Virginia to Kentucky some years before his death.
As the revolution neared, Bullitt became more active politically. He joined Prince William County's Committee of Safety along with Lynaugh Helm and Henry Lee. In 1776 he and Henry "Light Horse Harry" Lee were the county's delegates to a revolutionary Provincial Congress of Virginia. That meeting became a constitutional convention, producing an interim constitution used by the province for the next several years.
Under the new state's government, Bullitt became the Commonwealth Attorney (prosecutor) in Prince William County. He held that post until appointed to the bench of a state court in 1780. When the Virginia Ratifying Convention met to ratify the United States Constitution in 1788, Judge Bullitt was again the delegate for the County.
He remained a judge until his death at Mount View in 1791.