Josiah Yale
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Captain Josiah Yale (1752 – 1822) was a politician and military officer from Massachusetts. He became an early settler and pioneer of Lee, Massachusetts, and was made Justice of the Peace and Minister Treasurer. He also fought in the Stillwater Alarms of the Saratoga Campaign during the American War of Independence, and was a deputy in the Massachusetts House of Representatives, serving under Gov. James Sullivan and Lt. Gov. Levi Lincoln Sr.

Josiah Yale was born in Wallingford, Connecticut, on June 19, 1752, to John Yale and Eunice Andrews, members of the Yale family.[1] His father John was the grandson of Capt. Thomas Yale Jr., cofounder of Wallingford, and the great-grandson of Capt. Thomas Yale Sr., cofounder of New Haven Colony.[1] Josiah was the grandnephew of Capt. Theophilus Yale, a cousin of Capt. Elihu Yale, and a distant cousin of Lt. Gov. William H. Yale.[1]
In 1774, Yale bought 50 acres of land from William Andrus of Lenox in the northwest part of Lee, which became part of the estate of Senator Elizur Smith, uncle of paper manufacturer Wellington Smith, Yale's great-grandson.[2][3] Capt. Yale married to Ruth Tracy on December 26, 1774, in Lee, Massachusetts, one year before the incorporation of the town, and were the first couple recorded in its history.[4][2] Yale was among the early settlers and pioneers of Lee, Massachusetts, along with Cornelius Bassett, Jesse Gifford, William Ingersoll, Samuel Stanley, and others.[5][3]
The Battle of Lexington, the first military campaign of the American War of Independence, was fought about two years and a half before the incorporation of the town.[3] The town raised men for the war, and provided food to the Continental Army and the militia.[3] Regiments included those of Col. John Paterson, later Major General and Congressman, and Col. Benjamin Simonds of Simonds' Regiment of Militia.[3] Some of the town's soldiers were engaged in General John Stark's regiment at the Battle of Bennington, and participated in the campaign that brought the surrender of British General John Burgoyne.[3]
On January 4, 1780, Yale was put in charge, with the selectmen of the city, of the payments of 11 soldiers for 6 months of service.[3] Yale served during the American War of Independence and was promoted to the rank of captain.[6] He would also lead his regiment toward the Stillwater Alarms with the militia companies of Lee and Lenox, Massachusetts.[3] Yale's company during the revolution was part of General David Rosseter's regiment, and saw action at the Stillwater Alarms of the Saratoga Campaign.[7][8] Rosseter was previously major in Simonds' Regiment of Militia.

