I'm 100% in agreement with the milling crowd. Any cherry that stood the test of time to grow that large deserves to be admired indefinitely by being turned into premium slabs.
It looks like the one you have the measuring tap on has the pith off center which usually indicates reaction wood. And the sapwood is on the thick side. Otherwise, they look relatively straight and free of branching. Apparently the consumer market for typical cherry is way down right now, but I've heard any kind of live-edged slabs sell very well. The crotches would add some interest. If you have some free cash and somewhere to air-dry and store it, and stickers, you could take a stab at getting it milled. You never know from just a few pictures and ultimately, you never know what's inside until you open them up. For that much wood, definitely consider hiring a portable bandsaw mill. An experienced sawyer with hydraulics could knock that out pretty quickly, especially if you are just slabbing it. Definitely just a single day, maybe not even a whole day.
As a guy that looks at everything as firewood, I think I'd have those milled jrider. They look pretty decent & would make some nice slabs. Might even make a little on them.
I've got a 24"+ DBH, arrow straight black cherry on my property. Letting it grow for now. They get much bigger in NW Pa up on the Allegheny plateau. That's were the super premium cherry lumber comes from.