Evidence needed to support Anna Cutler as the daughter of William Cakebread & Katherine Cakebread
There were several women named Ann(e) Cakebread who were born about the correct time, but there is no way to to prove that one of them married James Cutler. There is no evidence showing that Ann's maiden name was Cakebread.
From https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Unknown-196735
The Great Migration entry for James Cutler[1] says: He married: (1) 1635 Ann ____ (often claimed to be the sister of John Grout's wife).[2]
The Great Migration entry for Thomas Cakebread[3]says:
"As [Mary Walton] Ferris also notes, 'If the early claim that Mary, first wife of Ens. John(1) Grout and Anne first of James(1) Cutler were sisters, can be proved, it means that Anne was another daughter of Thomas(1) and Sarah (____) Cakebread. [4] This claim appears only in the secondary literature, and seems unlikely, since the entire estate of Thomas Cakebread seems to have ended up in the hands of John Grout."
According to Torrey, Ann married James Cutler as his first wife in England by 1635, and she was either the sister or wife of John Grout. Torrey gives her possible maiden name as Grout or Cakebread.[5][6]
If there’s more substantive, published evidence, the relationship can be re attached.