Thomas Yale (Wallingford)

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Portrait of Capt. Yale's descendant, postmaster Ira Newell Yale, great-grandson of his child, Nathaniel Yale

Captain Thomas Yale (c. 1647 – 1736) was a British-American magistrate, politician and military officer. He was one of the founders of the town of Wallingford, Connecticut. He became Justice of the Peace, surveyor and moderator for Wallingford, and helped establish its first Congregational church in 1675. He was also elected, for numbers of years, as deputy to the Connecticut General Assembly.

His father, Capt. Thomas Yale, was the cofounder of New Haven Colony, and the first Yale to emigrate to the Thirteen Colonies.

Thomas Yale was born in New Haven Colony around 1647, to Mary Turner and Capt. Thomas Yale, members of the Yale family, and future namesake of Yale College.[1][2][3] His father was one of the cofounders of New Haven Colony with his step-grandfather, Gov. Theophilus Eaton, the colony's first governor, and his step-grand uncle, minister Samuel Eaton.[4][1]

His half-uncle, Samuel Eaton Jr., cofounded the Harvard Corporation in 1650, and his step-grand uncle, Nathaniel Eaton, had been Harvard's first president designate and builder before being dismissed in 1639.[5][6][7][8][9] Yale's uncle was Gov. Edward Hopkins, 2nd governor of Connecticut, and his other uncle, William Jones, was one of its early deputy governors.[10]

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