Cyrus Yale

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Portrait of Rev. Cyrus Yale's son, Yale Doctor John Yale of Ware, Massachusetts

Reverend Cyrus Yale (1786 – 1854) was an American clergyman, pastor, and minister. He was an active pacifist and was among the leaders of the temperance movement, having cofounded the United States Temperance Union with Stephen Van Rensselaer, the richest man in the country at the time. He was also a cousin of abolitionist Barnabas Yale and the author of the biography of Rev. Jeremiah Hallock and other works.

Town Hill Church, New Hartford, Connecticut, Rev. Yale was its fourth and last pastor

Cyrus Yale was born May 17, 1786, in Lee, Massachusetts, to Captain Josiah Yale and Ruth Tracy, members of the Yale family.[1][2] Cyrus was the cousin of Rev. Elisha Yale, founder of Kingsborough Academy in New York, and of abolitionist lawyer Barnabas Yale, who petitioned Congress in 1838 for the abolition of slavery with Senator Silas Wright, and cofounded the Central New-York State Society in 1842, auxiliary to the American Anti-Slavery Society.[3][2][4][5] His great-grandson was New York senator Mortimer Yale Ferris and his great-grandnephew was Harvard professor Edward Dana Durand, chief economist of the Department of Commerce.[6]

Yale worked in his early years on his father's farm, then started teaching at a school in his hometown.[1] He prepared for College under Rev. Dr. Hyde. He was first from Lee, Massachusetts, then he emigrated to New Hartford, Connecticut. Rev. Yale graduated with mention from Williams College in 1811.[1]

He studied under Dr. Ebenezer Porter, president of Andover Theological Seminary, and obtained his license to preach by the Hartford North Association, and became a pastor of the church in New Hartford in October 1814.[1] He was the fourth minister of the First Congregational Church at New Hartford, named the Town Hill Church at the time.[7][8]

Career

Personal life

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI