Hi - welcome to the GMB

Regret I've no idea as to the origin or date of your glasses - cranberry is always attractive, especially when combined with clear. You don't mention whether you've already tried any of the States groups involved in cut glass - it might be thought that they would be your best bet - we get very little interest or postings here showing your cut material - to the extent that unless this cut pattern can be found in the books then we're unable to help. I take it that grandmother is no longer around to help with suggestions of actual origin and possible date of acquisition.
States cut glass industry was at its most prolific apparently around 1900, and to quote Jane Spillman ('The American Cut Glass Industry') ... "Small cutting shops, each of which had ten to 50 employees turning out less expensive goods, mushroomed between 1900 and 1910" - so it was obviously a massive market, and finding the exact pattern is essential to finding a maker. That said, this particular industry was further complicated insofar as the trade was commonly split into those factories that made the blanks and then separately, those who purchased the blanks and specialized in cutting. I have looked through the above mentioned book, but no joy in finding this one.
Your glasses may lack anything near that sort of age, and in the absence of evidence it's difficult to be confident of any particular age - these glasses may have sat in cabinet for many decades and never used. The pattern on these might be am exact copy of something used over a hundred years ago, or it may simply be a combination of earlier design elements. Those regularly spaced horizontal lines looks to be something found mostly on States cutting - they're not a feature seen on European glass - although the arches containing multiple small relief diamonds are common to many countries - the faceted stem is a nice touch, and perhaps unusual to the States, who seem to been keen on notched stems.
Unfortunately, for us, glass travels, and it's not impossible that the origin of these was very far from your suggestion of the N.E. region.
Sorry this is unhelpful - fingers crossed someone may be able to add further, but I think the odds are against you.