Chester Cathedral in the city of Chester, David Yale was its Chancellor and was buried within the groundsErddig Hall, built on the original Erddig estate of Chancellor David Yale, sold generations later by his heirs
In 1598, he made extensive purchases of land from the Erddig family of Erddig near Wrexham, Wales, selling some but keeping Plas Grono as the family seat until it was sold by the heirs-at-law of his great-grandson Elihu Yale, benefactor of Yale University in America.[17][3]
His great-nephew, Thomas Yale, married Dorothy Hughes, daughter of Humphrey Hughes of the Hughes of Gwerclas, 14th Baron of Cymmer-yn-Edeirnion, and their daughter, Dorothy Yale, married the 16th Baron.[6][28] Through this line, the Plas-yn-Yale estate would be inherited through multiple successions by Rev. John Yale, a Rector from Cambridge University, and descendant of the Bostocks of Bostock Hall.[29]
David's son, London merchant Thomas Yale II, married the daughter of Bishop George Lloyd of Chester, and after his death and her remarriage to Gov. Theophilus Eaton, she and her children emigrated to America as a reconstituted family.[30][31] Eaton was at the time the English Ambassador to Danemark and Deputy Governor of the Eastland Company, representing King James I of England. Anne Lloyd's son, Capt. Thomas Yale, became one of the founders of New Haven Colony with his father-in-law, and another son, David Yale, became a wealthy merchant in Boston, attorney to Robert Rich, 2nd Earl of Warwick, and the father of Gov. Elihu Yale, benefactor of Yale College.[32][33]
David Yale also became second sergeant of the Artillery Company in 1648, and acquired the past home of Governor John Endecott, consisting of two acres of land with a garden, from merchant Edward Bendall, and was located in Scollay Square, downtown Boston.[33] Yale's estate was later sold by his attorney Capt. Thomas Lake, brother of Sir Edward Lake, 1st Baronet, and son-in-law of Deputy Governor Stephen Goodyear of the Goodyear family.[34][35]
↑'The ancient parish of Barking: Manors', in A History of the County of Essex: Volume 5, ed. W R Powell (London, 1966), pp. 190–214. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/essex/vol5/pp190-214 [accessed 15 December 2023].
↑Searle, William George (1871). The History of Queens' College of St Margret and St Bernard in the University of Cambridge. Part II. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
↑Cutter, William Richard. M, Genealogical and family history of the state of Connecticut volumes 4, by William R. Cutter, 1911. Vol. IV. New York: Lewis Historical Publishing Company, 1911. Print., p. 2002
↑Sachse, William L. "The Migration of New Englanders to England, 1640–1660." The American Historical Review, vol. 53, no. 2, 1948, pp. 251–78. JSTOR, https://doi.org/10.2307/1842820. Retrieved 25 November 2023, p. 255