Mehetible
____ - ____
Family 1
: Levi YALE
Children:
- +Chauncey YALE
- Mary YALE
- Julius C. YALE
- +John YALE
- Ruth YALE
INDEX OF PERSONS
Rhoda
____ - ____
Family 1
: Solomon YALE
Children:
- Hannah YALE
INDEX OF PERSONS
Tegid
ABT. 314 - ____
- BIRTH: ABT. 314, Of, , Wales
- AFN: MQR8-35
Family 1
:
Children:
- +Padarn "Beisrudd" Ap TEGID
INDEX OF PERSONS
[6234]
[S033338]
Adaele (ALICE , Alix) De VERMANDOIS
____ - 10 OCT 960
- BIRTH: Of, Vermandois, Neustria
- DEATH: 10 OCT 960, Bruges, Aquitaine
- BURIAL: Abbaye De St Pierre, Gand, Flandres
- AFN: 9G82-Q5
Father: Herbert II Count Of VERMANDOIS
Mother: Hildebrante Princess Of FRANCE
Family 1
: ARNOUL I, Count Of FLANDERS
- MARRIAGE: Of, , Flanders, Belgium
Children:
- Elstrude De FLANDERS
- + BAUDOUIN III, Count Of FLANDERS
- Egbert De FLANDERS
- Hildegarde Countess Of FLANDERS
- +Ledgarde De FLANDERS
_Herbert I Count Of VERMANDOIS _+
| (.... - 0902)
_Herbert II Count Of VERMANDOIS _|
| (.... - 0942) |
| |_Miss Princess Of FRANCE _______
|
|
|--Adaele (ALICE , Alix) De VERMANDOIS
| (.... - 0960)
| _Robert I King Of FRANCE _______+
| | (0860 - 0923) m 0890
|_Hildebrante Princess Of FRANCE _|
|
|_Bbeatrice De VERMANDOIS _______+
(.... - 0930) m 0890
INDEX OF PERSONS
[5357]
[S025533]
Mary C. ACKLEY
29 APR 1847 - 1 APR 1898
- BIRTH: 29 APR 1847, Pulaski, MI
- DEATH: 1 APR 1898
- REFERENCE: yw2106
Father: George ACKLEY
Mother: Almira YALE
_____________________
|
_George ACKLEY ______|
| (1819 - ....) m 1846|
| |_____________________
|
|
|--Mary C. ACKLEY
| (1847 - 1898)
| _Joel YALE __________+
| | (1801 - ....)
|_Almira YALE ________|
(1827 - ....) m 1846|
|_Delia STONE ________
(1806 - ....)
INDEX OF PERSONS
Hespie ADAMS
____ - ____
Family 1
: Darwin I. RUSSELL
- MARRIAGE: 12 DEC 1867
Children:
- Kate A RUSSELL
- Wilson H. RUSSELL
INDEX OF PERSONS
Lucy Elissa ADAMS
14 JUN 1842 - ____
- BIRTH: 14 JUN 1842, Brown Co., Ohio
- REFERENCE: yw1209
Father: Jesse ADAMS
Mother: Ann Aurelia YALE
_________________________
|
_Jesse ADAMS ________|
| (1815 - 1847) m 1835|
| |_________________________
|
|
|--Lucy Elissa ADAMS
| (1842 - ....)
| _Benjamin Boardman YALE _+
| | (1779 - ....) m 1801
|_Ann Aurelia YALE ___|
(1815 - 1863) m 1835|
|_Lucy STRONG ____________
(1782 - 1840) m 1801
INDEX OF PERSONS
Ingelger D' ANJOU
ABT. 898 - 927
- BIRTH: ABT. 898, Of, , Anjou, France
- DEATH: 927
- BURIAL: St. Martin De Tours
- AFN: 9HPS-HD
Father: Foulques I "le Roux" Count Of ANJOU
Mother: Roscille De LOCHES
_Ingelger I Count Of ANJOU AND ORLEANS _+
|
_Foulques I "le Roux" Count Of ANJOU _|
| (.... - 0938) |
| |_Aelinde (Rescinde) De AMBOISE _________
|
|
|--Ingelger D' ANJOU
| (.... - 0927)
| _Seigneur De LOCHES GARNIER ____________
| |
|_Roscille De LOCHES __________________|
|
|_Mrs-Garnier LOCHES ____________________
INDEX OF PERSONS
[6415]
[S033338]
Irmintrud Countess Of AVALGAU
____ - ____
- BIRTH: , Avalgau, , Germany
- AFN: WRQG-6Q
Father: Megingoz Count Of AVALGAU
Family 1
: Heribert Count In KINZIGGAU
Children:
- +Irmtrud Countess Of GLEIBERG
- Udo Von HAMMERSTEIN
- Gebhard Count Of GLEIBERG
- Gerberge Countess Of GLEIBERG
__
|
_Megingoz Count Of AVALGAU _|
| |
| |__
|
|
|--Irmintrud Countess Of AVALGAU
|
| __
| |
|____________________________|
|
|__
INDEX OF PERSONS
[6809]
[S033338]
Rebecca BELL
AUG 1643 - 2 MAY 1676
- BIRTH: AUG 1643, Stamford, Connecticut
[3809]
- DEATH: 2 MAY 1676, New Haven, Connecticut
[3810]
Father: Francis BELL
Mother: REBECCA
Family 1
: Jonathan TUTTLE
- MARRIAGE: WFT Est. 1656-1673
[7737]
[7738]
Children:
- +Rebecca TUTTLE
__
|
_Francis BELL _______|
| |
| |__
|
|
|--Rebecca BELL
| (1643 - 1676)
| __
| |
|_ REBECCA ___________|
(.... - 1684) |
|__
INDEX OF PERSONS
[3808]
[S043508]
[3809]
[S043508]
[3810]
[S043508]
[7737]
[S043508]
[7738]
[S043515]
Nancy BENTON
____ - ____
Family 1
: George YALE
- MARRIAGE: 20 SEP 1826
Children:
- Phila Winship YALE
- Winslow YALE
- Washington B. YALE
INDEX OF PERSONS
Kasa Princess Of BOHEMIA
ABT. 696 - ____
- BIRTH: ABT. 696, Of, Praha, Praha, Czechoslovakia
- AFN: 88GL-BG
Father: Krok (Cracus) Duke Of BOHEMIA
Mother: Mrs-Krok Duchess Of BOHEMIA
_Cech Or CZECHUS , Of BOHEMIA_
|
_Krok (Cracus) Duke Of BOHEMIA _|
| |
| |______________________________
|
|
|--Kasa Princess Of BOHEMIA
|
| ______________________________
| |
|_Mrs-Krok Duchess Of BOHEMIA ___|
|
|______________________________
INDEX OF PERSONS
[7175]
[S055020]
Jane Matilda BUSH
22 AUG 1839 - ____
- BIRTH: 22 AUG 1839, Turin, NY
- REFERENCE: yw1921
Father: Elisha Alvord BUSH
Mother: Sarah Clarinda HILLS
_____________________
|
_Elisha Alvord BUSH ___|
| (1808 - 1898) m 1835 |
| |_____________________
|
|
|--Jane Matilda BUSH
| (1839 - ....)
| _Allen HILLS ________+
| | (1784 - 1843) m 1812
|_Sarah Clarinda HILLS _|
(1815 - 1898) m 1835 |
|_Fanny Alsmena YALE _+
(1790 - 1858) m 1812
INDEX OF PERSONS
Joseph CHITTENDEN
____ - ____
Family 1
: Elizabeth YALE
INDEX OF PERSONS
Roxanna COLEY
12 JUN 1823 - 2 MAY 1889
Father: Samuel COLEY
Mother: Lucinda TURNER
Family 1
: George B. ANDREWS
- MARRIAGE: 3 DEC 1843
[7916]
Children:
- Frisbe ANDREWS
- Emma ANDREWS
- George ANDREWS
_____________________
|
_Samuel COLEY _______|
| (1795 - 1865) m 1817|
| |_____________________
|
|
|--Roxanna COLEY
| (1823 - 1889)
| _Jesse TURNER _______+
| | (1747 - 1834) m 1774
|_Lucinda TURNER _____|
(1796 - 1874) m 1817|
|_Phebe HUMISTON _____
(1756 - 1844) m 1774
INDEX OF PERSONS
[4365]
[S014099]
[4366]
[S014099]
[4367]
[S014099]
[7916]
[S014099]
Thaddeus COOK
10 SEP 1728 - 27 FEB 1800
- BIRTH: 10 SEP 1728, New Haven, New Haven, Ct
[836]
- DEATH: 27 FEB 1800
[837]
Father: Samuel COOK
Mother: Hannah LEWIS
Family 1
: Sarah HALL
- MARRIAGE: WFT Est. 1759-1772
[7395]
Family 2
: Abigail ?
- MARRIAGE: WFT Est. 1759-1790
[7396]
Family 3
: Lois BEACH
- MARRIAGE: 28 NOV 1750
[7397]
_Samuel COOK ________
| (1667 - 1725) m 1691
_Samuel COOK ________|
| (1694 - 1745) m 1720|
| |_Hannah IVES ________+
| (.... - 1715) m 1691
|
|--Thaddeus COOK
| (1728 - 1800)
| _____________________
| |
|_Hannah LEWIS _______|
(1699 - 1757) m 1720|
|_____________________
INDEX OF PERSONS
[835]
[S014099]
[836]
[S014099]
[837]
[S014099]
[7395]
[S014099]
[7396]
[S014099]
[7397]
[S014099]
Thomas COOK
____ - ____
Father: Charles COOK
Mother: Sylvia YALE
_____________________
|
_Charles COOK _______|
| |
| |_____________________
|
|
|--Thomas COOK
|
| _Elihu YALE _________+
| | (1747 - 1806) m 1774
|_Sylvia YALE ________|
(1777 - 1825) |
|_Lucretia STANLEY ___+
(1748 - 1813) m 1774
INDEX OF PERSONS
Robert CORBET
WFT Est. 1380-1395 - 1440
- BIRTH: WFT Est. 1380-1395, Morton. Shropshire, England
[4052]
- DEATH: 1440
[4053]
Father: Roger CORBET
Family 1
: Margaret MALLORY
- MARRIAGE: WFT Est. 1411-1432
[7840]
[7841]
Children:
- +Mary CORBET
__
|
_Roger CORBET _______|
| |
| |__
|
|
|--Robert CORBET
| (.... - 1440)
| __
| |
|_____________________|
|
|__
INDEX OF PERSONS
[4051]
[S043508]
[4052]
[S043508]
[4053]
[S043508]
[7840]
[S043508]
[7841]
[S043515]
George Kelcy CULP , Jr
1 OCT 1867 - 7 FEB 1869
- BIRTH: 1 OCT 1867
- DEATH: 7 FEB 1869
- REFERENCE: yw2181
Father: George K. CULP
Mother: Harriet Mariah YALE
______________________
|
_George K. CULP ______|
| (1833 - 1897) m 1855 |
| |______________________
|
|
|--George Kelcy CULP , Jr
| (1867 - 1869)
| _Stephen Porter YALE _+
| | (1781 - 1856) m 1815
|_Harriet Mariah YALE _|
(1835 - ....) m 1855 |
|_Chloe WHITNEY _______
(1795 - ....) m 1815
INDEX OF PERSONS
[5255]
[S059217]
Cyrus Yale DURAND
12 NOV 1842 - ____
- BIRTH: 12 NOV 1842
- REFERENCE: yw1963
Father: Edward DURAND
Mother: Marcia PORTER
_____________________
|
_Edward DURAND ______|
| (.... - 1854) m 1839|
| |_____________________
|
|
|--Cyrus Yale DURAND
| (1842 - ....)
| _Ebenezer PORTER ____+
| | (1776 - 1867) m 1800
|_Marcia PORTER ______|
(1805 - 1888) m 1839|
|_Eunice YALE ________+
(1777 - 1847) m 1800
INDEX OF PERSONS
Hogne EYSTEINSSON
ABT. 700 - ____
- BIRTH: ABT. 700, Of, Trondheim, Sor-Trondelag, Norway
- AFN: 8HS8-HG
Father: Eystein "Haardaade" THRONDSSON KING OF HEDMARK
Mother: Solveig HALFDANSDATTER
_Thrond _____________
|
_Eystein "Haardaade" THRONDSSON KING OF HEDMARK _|
| (.... - 0710) |
| |_Mrs-Thrond _________
|
|
|--Hogne EYSTEINSSON
|
| _____________________
| |
|_Solveig HALFDANSDATTER _________________________|
|
|_____________________
INDEX OF PERSONS
[6002]
[S033338]
Halfdan "the EYSTEINSSON KING IN VESTFOLD
ABT. 768 - ____
- BIRTH: ABT. 768, Of, Holtum, Vestfold, Norway
- DEATH: , Borre, Vestfold, Norway
- AFN: 8HS8-CR
Father: Eysteinn "Fret" HALFDANSSON KING IN VESTFOLD
Mother: Hildi EIRIKSDATTER
Family 1
: Hlif DAGSDATTER
- MARRIAGE: ABT. 788, Of, , Vestfold, Norway
Children:
- +Gudrod HALFDANSSON KING IN VESTFOLD
_Halfdan "Hvitbein" OLAFSSON KING IN UPPSALA _+
|
_Eysteinn "Fret" HALFDANSSON KING IN VESTFOLD _|
| |
| |_Asa EYSTEINSDATTER __________________________+
|
|
|--Halfdan "the EYSTEINSSON KING IN VESTFOLD
|
| _Eirik AGNARSSON _____________________________+
| |
|_Hildi EIRIKSDATTER ___________________________|
|
|______________________________________________
INDEX OF PERSONS
[6494]
[S033338]
Fulbert De FALAISE
ABT. 978 - ____
- BIRTH: ABT. 978, Of, Falaise, Normandie
- AFN: GS5L-BT
Family 1
: Doda Of FALAISE
Children:
- +Harlette De FALAISE
- Walter Of FALAISE
- Reynald Lord Of CROY
- Osbern Of FALAISE
- +Harlette De FALAISE
INDEX OF PERSONS
[5661]
[S033338]
Huldah FOSTER
10 MAY 1741 - ____
Family 1
: Nathaniel YALE
Children:
- +James YALE
- John YALE
- Huldah YALE
- Mary YALE
- +Nathaniel YALE
- Anna YALE
INDEX OF PERSONS
Adbelahide Queen Of FRANCE
____ - ____
- BIRTH: Of, Paris, , France
- AFN: 9GCX-B0
Family 1
: Louis II "The Stammerer" King Of FRANCE
- MARRIAGE: 875
Children:
- Ermentrude Princess Of FRANCE
- +Charles III "The Simple" King Of FRANCE
INDEX OF PERSONS
[6163]
[S033338]
Betsey FRANK
____ - ____
Family 1
: Reuben YALE
Children:
- Mary E. YALE
- Sarah J. YALE
- Ellen YALE
INDEX OF PERSONS
Hildegarde De GAND
ABT. 958 - ____
- BIRTH: ABT. 958, Of, Gand, Flanders, Belgium
- AFN: MQD4-GC
Father: Wickmann (Wieman) I Count Of GAND
Mother: Ledgarde De FLANDERS
_____________________________________
|
_Wickmann (Wieman) I Count Of GAND _|
| |
| |_____________________________________
|
|
|--Hildegarde De GAND
|
| _ ARNOUL I, Count Of FLANDERS________+
| | (.... - 0964)
|_Ledgarde De FLANDERS ______________|
(.... - 0964) |
|_Adaele (ALICE , Alix) De VERMANDOIS_+
(.... - 0960)
INDEX OF PERSONS
[5367]
[S025533]
unk1 GARRELTS
Private - ____
- BIRTH: Private
- REFERENCE: 450
Father: Lural H. GARRELTS
Mother: Lauretta MULSHINE
_Arthur J. GARRELTS _
| (1878 - 1965) m 1902
_Lural H. GARRELTS __|
| |
| |_Mabel Nora CRAMER __+
| (1883 - 1966) m 1902
|
|--unk1 GARRELTS
|
| _____________________
| |
|_Lauretta MULSHINE __|
|
|_____________________
INDEX OF PERSONS
Hugh GIFFARD
ABT. 1045 - ____
- BIRTH: ABT. 1045, Of, Beuff, Normandy, France
- AFN: 9HNQ-TQ
Father: Walter GIFFARD
Mother: Agnes Ermentrude FLEITEL
_Osbern De BOLEBEC ___________
| (.... - 1063)
_Walter GIFFARD ___________|
| |
| |_Avelina (Aveline) De CREPON _+
|
|
|--Hugh GIFFARD
|
| _Gerald FLAITEL ______________
| |
|_Agnes Ermentrude FLEITEL _|
|
|_Gerald Mrs. FLAITEL _________
INDEX OF PERSONS
[4924]
[S025533]
Samuel GRAHAM
____ - ____
Family 1
: Eliza CURTIS
- MARRIAGE: 1817
INDEX OF PERSONS
Agnes De GREENE
ABT. 1341 - ____
- BIRTH: ABT. 1341, Of, Green's Norton, Northamptonshire, England
- AFN: 9R34-DS
Father: Henry De GREENE
Mother: Catherine De DRAYTON
_Thomas De GREENE _____+
| (1292 - ....) m 1987
_Henry De GREENE ______|
| (1310 - 1370) |
| |_Lucy La ZOUCHE _______+
| m 1987
|
|--Agnes De GREENE
|
| _John De DRAYTON ______
| |
|_Catherine De DRAYTON _|
|
|_Phillippa D' ARDERNE _
INDEX OF PERSONS
[6890]
[S033338]
Henry De GREENE
1310 - 1370
- BIRTH: 1310, Greens Norton, Northampton, England
- DEATH: 1370, Broughton, Dorset, England
- AFN: 8501-84
Father: Thomas De GREENE
Mother: Lucy La ZOUCHE
Family 1
: Catherine De DRAYTON
Children:
- Agnes De GREENE
- +Thomas De GREENE
- Richard De GREENE
- Nicholas De GREENE
- Henry De GREENE
- Amadilo De GREENE
_Thomas De GREENE __________________+
|
_Thomas De GREENE ___|
| (1292 - ....) m 1987|
| |_Alice BOTTISHAM ___________________+
|
|
|--Henry De GREENE
| (1310 - 1370)
| _Eudo (Eon) La ZOUCHE ______________+
| |
|_Lucy La ZOUCHE _____|
m 1987 |
|_Millicent De CANTILUPE (CAUNTELO) _+
INDEX OF PERSONS
[5175]
[S025533]
Rohese De GRENTEMESNIL
ABT. 1062 - ____
- BIRTH: ABT. 1062, Of, Grentemesnil, Calvados, France
- AFN: KKSH-K7
Father: Hugh De GRENTEMESNIL
Mother: Adeliza Or Alice De BEAUMONT
_Robert De GRENTEMESNIL ____________________+
| (.... - 1039)
_Hugh De GRENTEMESNIL _________|
| (.... - 1093) |
| |_Hawise D' ECHAFOUR ________________________
|
|
|--Rohese De GRENTEMESNIL
|
| _Yves II Beaumont Count Of -SUR-OISE TWIN] _+
| |
|_Adeliza Or Alice De BEAUMONT _|
(.... - 1091) |
|_Mrs. Judith BEAUMONT ______________________
INDEX OF PERSONS
[6728]
[S033338]
Nels Robert GUNDERSON
Private - ____
- BIRTH: Private
- EVENT: ADOP:
Private
Father: Lyle Quentin GUNDERSON
Mother: Ida Virginia RICHARDSON
Family 1
: Helen Paula MEICHTRY
- EVENT: Private-Begin:
Private
- EVENT: DIV:
Private
____________________________
|
_Lyle Quentin GUNDERSON __|
| |
| |____________________________
|
|
|--Nels Robert GUNDERSON
|
| _Norman Stevens RICHARDSON _+
| | (1898 - 1951) m 1920
|_Ida Virginia RICHARDSON _|
|
|_Ada Nilla SMITH ___________
m 1920
INDEX OF PERSONS
[2433]
[S003057]
Nancy M. HALL
22 JUN 1808 - ____
Family 1
: John YALE
- MARRIAGE: 30 OCT 1833
Children:
- Ann Eliza YALE
- +John YALE
- +Edward Hall YALE
- Mary J. YALE
INDEX OF PERSONS
William H. HAMMOND
27 NOV 1874 - 11 JUN 1895
- BIRTH: 27 NOV 1874
- DEATH: 11 JUN 1895, Drowned
- REFERENCE: yw1320
Father: Russell Prime HAMMOND
Mother: Mary E. WINGATE
_Joshua Prime HAMMOND _
| (1781 - 1848) m 1803
_Russell Prime HAMMOND _|
| (1825 - 1904) m 1856 |
| |_Eliza YALE ___________+
| (1783 - 1857) m 1803
|
|--William H. HAMMOND
| (1874 - 1895)
| _______________________
| |
|_Mary E. WINGATE _______|
(1832 - 1904) m 1856 |
|_______________________
INDEX OF PERSONS
Adna HART
____ - 21 NOV 1846
Family 1
: Roxanna YALE
INDEX OF PERSONS
Lovina HAVILAND
____ - ____
Family 1
: Oliver YALE
Children:
- +Paulina YALE
- +Haviland YALE
INDEX OF PERSONS
Levi HOUGH
____ - ____
Family 1
: Lois MERRIAMS
INDEX OF PERSONS
Gilbert "Le Jeune" De HUGLEVILLE
ABT. 1032 - ____
- BIRTH: ABT. 1032, St-Valbery-En-Caux, Normandie
- AFN: 1RGV-6TT
Father: Richard De HUGLEVILLE
Mother: Ada De HUGLEVILLE
__
|
_Richard De HUGLEVILLE _|
| |
| |__
|
|
|--Gilbert "Le Jeune" De HUGLEVILLE
|
| __
| |
|_Ada De HUGLEVILLE _____|
|
|__
INDEX OF PERSONS
[6082]
[S033338]
Phebe IVES
29 DEC 1644 - 1682
- BIRTH: 29 DEC 1644, New Haven, New Haven, Conn.
- DEATH: 1682
- CHRISTENING: 29 DEC 1644, Quinnipiac, New Haven, Ct
- AFN: MS0L-85
Father: William IVES
Mother: Hannah DICKERMAN
_John IVES ___________________
|
_William IVES _______|
| (1621 - 1648) m 1639|
| |_Mrs. IVES ___________________
|
|
|--Phebe IVES
| (1644 - 1682)
| _Thomas DICKERMAN ____________+
| | (.... - 1657) m 1631
|_Hannah DICKERMAN ___|
(1622 - 1665) m 1639|
|_Eleanor "Ellen" WHITTINGTON _+
(1601 - ....) m 1631
INDEX OF PERSONS
[6968]
[S033338]
Richard Ellsworth JOHNSON
Private - ____
Family 1
: Sharon Lou BRANCH
- EVENT: Private-Begin:
Private
Children:
- +Richard Wayne JOHNSON
- Tammy Sue JOHNSON
INDEX OF PERSONS
[2517]
[S003059]
Fredrick JUDD
____ - ____
Family 1
: Charry C. YALE
INDEX OF PERSONS
Stephanie LAMANQUE
Private - ____
Family 1
: David Edward TICE
- EVENT: Private-Begin:
Private
INDEX OF PERSONS
[4583]
[S014099]
Ann LLOYD
1591 - 1659
- BIRTH: 1591, Of London, Middlesex, England
- DEATH: 1659, London, Lndn, Eng, Gb
- BURIAL: 25 MAY 1658
- AFN: 8J99-B8
- REFERENCE: no #
Father: George LLOYD
Mother: Anne WILKINSON
Family 1
: Thomas YALE
- MARRIAGE: ABT. 1612
- MARRIAGE: WFT Est. 1602-1636
[7342]
- MARRIAGE: 13 APR 1612, , Chester, Cheshire, Eng
Children:
- +Thomas YALE
- Elizabeth Mary YALE
- +Ann YALE
- +David YALE
- Elizabeth WRIGHT
_Meredydd LLOYD _____
| (1526 - ....)
_George LLOYD _______|
| (1560 - 1615) m 1590|
| |_Janet CONVY ________
| (1530 - ....)
|
|--Ann LLOYD
| (1591 - 1659)
| _John WILKENSON _____
| |
|_Anne WILKINSON _____|
(1564 - 1648) m 1590|
|_Ellen BEARCLIFFE ___
INDEX OF PERSONS
[78]
[S014520]
[79]
[S016790]
[7342]
[S014190]
Anne LOWTHROPPE
12 MAY 1616 - 30 APR 1617
- BIRTH: 12 MAY 1616, Egerton, Huddersfield, Yorks, Eng
- DEATH: 30 APR 1617, Egerton, Egerton, Kent, England
- CHRISTENING: 12 MAY 1616, Edgerton, Kent, England, England
- BURIAL: 30 APR 1617, Egerton, Egerton, Kent, England
- AFN: 842P-0M
Father: John LATHROP
Mother: Hannah HOWSE
_Thomas LATHROP _____+
| (1536 - 1506) m 1574
_John LATHROP _______|
| (1584 - 1653) m 1610|
| |_Mary HOWELL ________
| (1539 - 1587) m 1574
|
|--Anne LOWTHROPPE
| (1616 - 1617)
| _John HOUSE(HOWSE) __
| | (1560 - 1630)
|_Hannah HOWSE _______|
(.... - 1633) m 1610|
|_Alice Mrs HOWSE ____
(1572 - 1653)
INDEX OF PERSONS
[5921]
[S033338]
Jordan Ross MCINTOSH
Private - ____
Father: Larry William MCINTOSH
Mother: Rise' Jo CLAVEAU
_William Junior MCINTOSH _+
| (1924 - 1976)
_Larry William MCINTOSH _|
| |
| |_Wilma May MAYNARD _______
|
|
|--Jordan Ross MCINTOSH
|
| __________________________
| |
|_Rise' Jo CLAVEAU _______|
|
|__________________________
INDEX OF PERSONS
[2622]
[S003059]
Ranulph "De Gernon" De MESCHINES
1099 - 16 DEC 1153
- BIRTH: 1099, Castle, Gernon, Normandy, France
- DEATH: 16 DEC 1153, , , , England
- BURIAL: St Werburgh, Chester, Cheshire, England
- AFN: V9TX-S3
Father: Ranulph De Meschin Of CHESTER
Mother: Lucy Countess Of CHESTER
_Ranulf De MESCHINES VISCOUNT DE BAYEUX _+
| (.... - 1129)
_Ranulph De Meschin Of CHESTER _|
| (.... - 1128) |
| |_Maud D' AVRANCHES ______________________+
|
|
|--Ranulph "De Gernon" De MESCHINES
| (1099 - 1153)
| _Thorold ________________________________
| |
|_Lucy Countess Of CHESTER ______|
|
|_Miss MALET _____________________________+
INDEX OF PERSONS
[5438]
[S025533]
Eggfrida Countess Of NORTHUMBRIA
ABT. 973 - ____
- BIRTH: ABT. 973, Of, , , England
- AFN: V9VN-60
Father: Aldun
Family 1
: Ughtred NORTHUMBRIA
- MARRIAGE: ABT. 991, Of, , , England
Children:
- Eadulf Of BERNICIA
- Aldred Of BERNICIA
- +Aldred Of BERNICIA
__
|
_Aldun ______________|
| |
| |__
|
|
|--Eggfrida Countess Of NORTHUMBRIA
|
| __
| |
|_____________________|
|
|__
INDEX OF PERSONS
[5286]
[S025533]
Ingjald OLAFSSON
ABT. 702 - ____
- BIRTH: ABT. 702, , Romerike, Buskerud, Norway
- AFN: HRN9-P1
Father: Olaf "The Wood Cutter" INGJALDSSON
Mother: Solveig HALFDANSDOTTER
_Ingjald "Braut" "The ONUNDSSON KING IN SWEDEN _+
|
_Olaf "The Wood Cutter" INGJALDSSON _|
| |
| |_Gauthild ALGAUTSDOTTER ________________________+
|
|
|--Ingjald OLAFSSON
|
| _Halfdan SOLFASSON _____________________________
| |
|_Solveig HALFDANSDOTTER _____________|
|
|_Mrs-Halfdan SOLFASSON _________________________
INDEX OF PERSONS
[6554]
[S033338]
Iestyn Ap OWAIN
ABT. 942 - ____
- BIRTH: ABT. 942, Of, , Deheubarth, Wales
- AFN: S2R8-Q7
Father: Owain Ap HYWEL
Mother: Angharad Verch LLEWELYN
_Hywel "Dda" Ap CADELL __+
| (.... - 0950)
_Owain Ap HYWEL __________|
| (.... - 0987) |
| |_Elen Verch LLYWARCH ____+
| (.... - 0943)
|
|--Iestyn Ap OWAIN
|
| _Llywelyn Ap MERFYN _____+
| |
|_Angharad Verch LLEWELYN _|
|
|_Mrs-Llewelyn Ap MERFYN _
INDEX OF PERSONS
[5840]
[S033338]
Wright PALMER
____ - ____
Family 1
: Sally YALE
INDEX OF PERSONS
Daniel Leonard PETERSON
Private - ____
- BIRTH: Private
- REFERENCE: 698
Father: Fred Edward PETERSON
Mother: Linda Marie GRANT
_Alvin Leonard PETERSON _
|
_Fred Edward PETERSON _|
| |
| |_Doris Jean DIELMAN _____+
|
|
|--Daniel Leonard PETERSON
|
| _________________________
| |
|_Linda Marie GRANT ____|
|
|_________________________
INDEX OF PERSONS
Inez Wanita PETERSON
Private - ____
- BIRTH: Private
- REFERENCE: 687
Father: Alvin Leonard PETERSON
Mother: Doris Jean DIELMAN
Family 1
: LeRoy Richard SCHOLTZ
- EVENT: Private-Begin:
Private
REFERENCE: 4806
Children:
- Jonathan David SCHOLTZ
- Christina Elizabeth SCHOLTZ
- Mark Timothy SCHOLTZ
Family 2
: Marvin Eugene MILLER
- EVENT: Private-Begin:
Private
REFERENCE: 4807
Children:
- Erin Jean MILLER
____________________________
|
_Alvin Leonard PETERSON _|
| |
| |____________________________
|
|
|--Inez Wanita PETERSON
|
| _Frederick Charles DIELMAN _
| | (1885 - 1972) m 1907
|_Doris Jean DIELMAN _____|
|
|_Inez Emma CRAMER __________+
(1889 - 1918) m 1907
INDEX OF PERSONS
Horace Tracey PITKIN
28 OCT 1869 - ____
- BIRTH: 28 OCT 1869, Phily
- REFERENCE: 2020
Father: Horace Wells PITKIN
Mother: Lucy Tracy YALE
_____________________
|
_Horace Wells PITKIN _|
| (1823 - 1889) |
| |_____________________
|
|
|--Horace Tracey PITKIN
| (1869 - ....)
| _Cyrus YALE _________+
| | (1786 - 1854)
|_Lucy Tracy YALE _____|
(1832 - 1881) |
|_Asenath BRADLEY ____
(1790 - ....)
INDEX OF PERSONS
Renaud De ROUCY
ABT. 931 - 15 MAR 972/73
- BIRTH: ABT. 931, Of, Reims, Marne, France
- DEATH: 15 MAR 972/73
- AFN: FLHB-80
Family 1
: Alberade De LORRAINE
- MARRIAGE: ABT. 945, , , , France
Children:
- +Gilbert De ROUCY
- Ermentrude (Irmtrude) Countess Of RHEIMS
INDEX OF PERSONS
[5747]
[S033338]
Drucilla SCHNEIDER
29 JUN 1830 - ____
- BIRTH: 29 JUN 1830, Como, Quebec
Family 1
: Andrew YALE
- MARRIAGE: 19 FEB 1852
Children:
- Henry Andrew YALE
- Esther Drucilla YALE
- Anna Matilda YALE
- James Murray YALE
- Zaida Susanna YALE
- Sarah Julia YALE
- Harriet Marilda YALE
- Alice Gertrude YALE
- George Albert YALE
- Victoria Amyrena YALE
- Milton Mortimer YALE
- John William Francis YALE
INDEX OF PERSONS
Erin Elizabeth SLAYTON
Private - ____
- BIRTH: Private
- REFERENCE: 268
Father: Jack Lynn SLAYTON
Mother: Katharine J. MORRILL
_Earl Chester SLAYTON _
| (.... - 1960) m 1933
_Jack Lynn SLAYTON ____|
| |
| |_Janice Evelyn OLIVER _+
| (1911 - 1960) m 1933
|
|--Erin Elizabeth SLAYTON
|
| _______________________
| |
|_Katharine J. MORRILL _|
|
|_______________________
INDEX OF PERSONS
Michelle SMITH
____ - ____
Family 1
: Reed Little EVANS
INDEX OF PERSONS
Heman SPRAUGE
5 JUN 1844 - WFT Est. 1887-1936
- BIRTH: 5 JUN 1844, Tallmadge, Ohio
- BIRTH: 5 JUN 1844
[173]
- DEATH: WFT Est. 1887-1936
[174]
- REFERENCE: yw2145
Resided at East Akron, Ohio.
Father: Jesse SPRAGUE
Mother: Sally YALE
Family 1
: Lila CAREY
- MARRIAGE: 20 SEP 1876
[7499]
[7500]
Children:
- +Edna G. SPRAGUE
- +Charles J. SPRAGUE
_Jonathan SPRAGUE ___+
| (1766 - 1837)
_Jesse SPRAGUE ______|
| (1809 - 1877) m 1836|
| |_Sarah TOUSLEY ______
| (1774 - 1842)
|
|--Heman SPRAUGE
| (1844 - ....)
| _Heman YALE _________+
| | (1781 - 1825)
|_Sally YALE _________|
(1812 - 1896) m 1836|
|_Rhoda LOWERY _______
INDEX OF PERSONS
[NI2808]
[172]
[S014099]
[173]
[S014099]
[174]
[S014099]
[7499]
[S014099]
[7500]
[S027375]
Alice Elizabeth STRATE
12 DEC 1912 - 3 APR 1985
- BIRTH: 12 DEC 1912, Spring City, Sanpete co., CA
[2295]
- DEATH: 3 APR 1985, Visalia, Tulare ci., CA
[2296]
Family 1
: George T. RICHARDSON
- MARRIAGE: 23 JUN 1938, Lindsey, Tulare co, CA
[7587]
Children:
- George Gary RICHARDSON
- Dana Lawrence RICHARDSON
INDEX OF PERSONS
[2294]
[S003057]
[2295]
[S003057]
[2296]
[S003057]
[7587]
[S003057]
Charles TAYLOR
____ - ____
of the Toronto Globe
Family 1
: Mary Pauline YALE
INDEX OF PERSONS
[NI2332]
Roger De TOENI
ABT. 1132 - ____
- BIRTH: ABT. 1132,
- AFN: HRN2-GT
Father: Roger De TOENI (DE CONCHES)
Mother: Ida (Gertrude) De HAINAULT
_Ralph De TOENI (DE CONCHES) _+
| m 1103
_Roger De TOENI (DE CONCHES) _|
| |
| |_Alice (Adeliza) HUNTINGDON __+
| m 1103
|
|--Roger De TOENI
|
| ______________________________
| |
|_Ida (Gertrude) De HAINAULT __|
|
|______________________________
INDEX OF PERSONS
[7256]
[S056861]
Rosetta TUPPER
1840 - 21 JUL 1870
- BIRTH: 1840, WOODLAND, BARRY CO, MI
[2820]
- DEATH: 21 JUL 1870
[2821]
Family 1
: Esteven RUSSELL
- MARRIAGE: 4 NOV 1860
[7633]
Children:
- Lina RUSSELL
- Clayton RUSSELL
- Eunice RUSSELL
- Pliny RUSSELL
INDEX OF PERSONS
[2819]
[S003059]
[2820]
[S003059]
[2821]
[S003059]
[7633]
[S003059]
Asbjorn ULFSSON
ABT. 1023 - 1086
- BIRTH: ABT. 1023, , , Denmark
- DEATH: 1086
- AFN: 8Q7V-VK
Father: Ulf THORGILSSON
Mother: Estrid Svendsdatter "Princess Of DENMARK"
_Thorgils STYRJORNSSON __+
|
_Ulf THORGILSSON ___________________________|
| (.... - 1027) |
| |_Sigrid _________________
|
|
|--Asbjorn ULFSSON
| (.... - 1086)
| _Svend I "Forked BEARD" _+
| | (.... - 1013) m 0998
|_Estrid Svendsdatter "Princess Of DENMARK" _|
|
|_Swietoslava ____________+
m 0998
INDEX OF PERSONS
[5094]
[S025533]
Harvey WAKEMAN
____ - ____
Family 1
: Livna Polly YALE
Children:
- Dessie WAKEMAN
INDEX OF PERSONS
Abel YALE
13 APR 1733 - 4 JUL 1797
- OCCUPATION: farmer
- BIRTH: 13 APR 1733
- DEATH: 4 JUL 1797
- REFERENCE: yw-161
Father: Abel YALE
Mother: Esther COOK
Family 1
: Sarah JEROME
- MARRIAGE: 20 JUL 1759
Children:
- Esther YALE
- +Thomas YALE
- +Sarah YALE
- Lydia YALE
- Anna YALE
- Lois YALE
- Ruth YALE
- Elizabeth YALE
- +Abel YALE
- Rhoda YALE
- Mary YALE
- Rhoda YALE
_Nathaniel YALE _____+
| (1681 - 1711) m 1702
_Abel YALE __________|
| (1706 - 1784) m 1730|
| |_Anna PECK __________+
| (1684 - 1715) m 1702
|
|--Abel YALE
| (1733 - 1797)
| _____________________
| |
|_Esther COOK ________|
(.... - 1740) m 1730|
|_____________________
INDEX OF PERSONS
Abigail YALE
16 NOV 1697 - ____
- BIRTH: 16 NOV 1697
- REFERENCE: yw-38
Father: John YALE
Mother: Rebecca MIX
_Thomas YALE ________+
| (1616 - 1683) m 1645
_John YALE __________|
| (1646 - 1711) |
| |_Mary TURNER ________+
| (1624 - 1704) m 1645
|
|--Abigail YALE
| (1697 - ....)
| _____________________
| |
|_Rebecca MIX ________|
(1656 - 1734) |
|_____________________
INDEX OF PERSONS
Antoinette R. YALE
9 DEC 1831 - 4 MAR 1832
- BIRTH: 9 DEC 1831
- DEATH: 4 MAR 1832
- REFERENCE: yw1127
Father: William YALE
Mother: Mary JOHNSON
_Samuel YALE ________+
| (1763 - 1810)
_William YALE _______|
| (1784 - 1833) |
| |_Eunice PAIN ________
| (.... - 1804)
|
|--Antoinette R. YALE
| (1831 - 1832)
| _____________________
| |
|_Mary JOHNSON _______|
(.... - 1854) |
|_____________________
INDEX OF PERSONS
[76]
[S059217]
Elihu YALE
5 APR 1648 - 22 JUL 1721
- OCCUPATION: Governer of Madras
- BIRTH: 5 APR 1648, New Haven, New Haven, Ct
- BIRTH: 5 APR 1649, Boston
- DEATH: 22 JUL 1721, London, , , England
- DEATH: 8 JUL 1721, London
- BURIAL: , , , Wales
- BURIAL: Wrexham, Wales
- AFN: 3G1L-7T
- REFERENCE: ey-9,yw-24
The Elihu Yale
Elihu Yale was son of David Yale, who came from London, England with his mother and
stepfather, Theophilus Eaton, in 1637, and who was one of the members of the company, headed
by Mr. Eaton and Rev John Davenport, which founded the town and colony of New Haven,
Connecticut, in 1638.
It has been stated by some writers, that Elihu was the son of Thomas Yale of New Haven,
but there is no evidence to support this view, and on the other hand, there is ample, indisputable
evidence, that he was the son of David. The will of David Yale and the entry of Elihu's
admission to Master Dugard's school are sufficient to prove his parentage, and this evidence is
also substantiated by the indirect testimony of Cotton Mather and Mr. Clap, and by the records at
Madras, in which Governor Yale's brother, Thomas, is said to have been a trader between China
and India, and further and most emphatically, by the will of this same Thomas, made September
29, 1697, in which he makes bequests to his "Brother Elihu Yale," and also, with certain
provisions to the "heirs male of my uncle Thomas Yale in New England and his right heirs
forever." As will be noted, Thomas Yale by this will makes it clear that Thomas Yale of New Haven was Elihu Yale's uncle, instead of father. Furthermore, such eminent authorities as Franklin B. Dexter M. A., of Yale University and Alfred Neobard
Palmer, Antiquarian, of Wrexham Wales, as well as other prominent writers, are emphatic in stating that Elihu Yale was the son of David.
Sometime between March 1641 and April 1644, as has been stated in this work, David Yale removed from New Haven to Boston, Mass. His son Elihu was born April 5, 1649, undoubtedly in or near Boston. Some authorities state, on Pemberton square,
Boston. In the year 1652 when Elihu was three years of age, David Yale's family left Boston and went to England, where David had already gone, settling finally in London, where we learn about the arrangements for Elihu's education.
At the time of the execution of King Charles, the master of the well known Merchant
Tailors' School in London, supported by the rich company of that name, was Mr. William
Dugard, a graduate of Cambridge, a good scholar, and withal an excellent printer, who combined
the business of his trade with other duties. He was the chief printer of the first editions of the
Eikon Basilike, attributed to the late king, and in 1650 provoked the Commonwealth authorities
still further by printing an English edition of the Defence Of Ike King, by Salmasius; for this his
mastership was taken away, and he was thrown into prison. Brought to terms by this, and
restored to his office, he also printed Milton's answer to Salmasius; but in 1661 was again
dismissed from his place, though not for political reasons, and started a private school in
Coleman street, in the city, some of the registers of admission to which are still preserved; and
among the entries, under date of September 1, 1662, is the name of "Elihu Yale, 2d son of Mr.
David Yale, merchant, born in New England, 1649." (Notes & Queries, 2d ser., ix, 101.) There
can be no doubt that this was the boy for whom Yale College is named, who, now in the autumn
of 1662, in his fourteenth or fifteenth year, joined Master Dugard's school, in Coleman street; the
same short and narrow street in which still stood (until the great fire four years later) the parish
church of St. Stephen's; memorable to us as the church of which John Davenport was vicar, and
the spiritual parent of the first church of New Haven.
But the training of Elihu Yale by Milton's friend, Master Dugard, was of the briefest; for
death ended Dugard's teaching three months after Elihu's admission.
We bear no more of his school experience; but we know the setting of public events, in
which he grew from boy to man, and that no other equally brief period in London history has
exceeded this in interest and excitement. He was old enough to have seen Cromwell riding in
London streets with his guards; to have joined in silent concourse at his funeral, and in the
shouts of joy at the Restoration. He lived through the agonies of the plague; he saw the
devastation of the great fire. If it pleased him, he may have seen Milton walking in the Park, and
Dryden lounging at Will's coffee- house, he may have heard Jeremy Taylor and Richard Baxter
preaching in London pulpits, and Geo. Fox and Wm. Penn exhorting in Quaker meeting. He saw
the last of an older order of things, like nothing since; and he grew up with the beginnings of
what we may fairly call Modern England.
At the end of the sixteenth century a charter had been granted by Queen Elizabeth to a
Company of London merchants trading with the East Indies, by which they secured a monopoly
of that trade, so far as not possessed by friendly European powers. The Portuguese had already
been established in the Peninsula for a hundred years, and simultaneously with the English, the
Dutch took a hand in the lucrative traffic.
The first English trading house was at Surat, high up on the Western Coast; but this was
not enough; the Eastern side had superior attractions from its offering certain goods, especially
the beautifully dyed or painted calicoes, much in demand not only in Europe, but still] more in
Farther India and the islands to the eastward. But the English attempts to establish a permanent
station on the Coromandel Coast were unsuccessful until in 1639, the same year in which civil
government was set upon the soil of New Haven, a narrow strip of land, six mile long and a
mile in breadth, was purchased of the native ruler of the middle Eastern coast. The shore was
sandy and harbor less; but the close proximity of the flourishing Portuguese city of St. Thomas
augured well for the security of the new settlement, and the further circumstance that the
territory included a small island, about as large as our College Square, fixed the bargain. The
island was at once fortified, and as none but Europeans were allowed to live on it, this became
known as White Town, or from the name given to the fortifications, Fort St. George; while a
Black Town quickly sprang upon the adjacent shore; and both settlements together were known
as Madras.
In its earliest years the population of the Fort was very scanty, perhaps twenty or thirty
servants in the Company, and a small garrison; but before long the neighboring Portuguese city
was broken up by a native assault, and many of the refugees were received in Fort St. George,
and built themselves dwellings there; and with the growth of the Company's trade came an
increasing official population.
At the head of affairs was the agent of the East India Company, styled the Governor of
the settlement and afterwards the President, who was also the commander of the garrison. He
was lodged in a stately mansion in the center of the island, and kept an open table at which all of
the Company's servants were expected to report themselves every day at dinner. Next to him
were a bookkeeper (or treasurer), a warehouse keeper (or custom house inspector), and a
collector of taxes; these with some trusted merchants made up the Council, who decided with
the Governor all matters of business concerning the settlement and its trade, except so far as
orders from home took precedence. Under these were the subordinates, all of whom were lodged
and fed at the Company's expense.
Salaries were notoriously and ludicrously small,-from the Governor's at o100 a year
down to the apprentices' at o5. It was expected that officers and men would indulge in private
ventures of their own in Eastern ports, while nominally promoting the Company's trade. Then,
too, the opportunities for levying extra and illegal taxes on the natives who sold goods to the
Company, were so evident that they may be said to have been expected and connived at; while
the want of the restraints of family life, and the close neighborhood of the black town with its
temptations to the grosser forms of dissipation, made the Fort a poor school of morals for any
new comer, however correct his principles and his life before leaving England.
It was about 1670, when just past his majority, that Elihu Yale emigrated to Madras to
make his fortune as a merchant. The details of his rise there are all wanting; but he probably
began in the lowest grade of the service, as an apprentice, rising from that to the successive
ranks of writer, factor, and merchant. We fix the date of his beginning by his casual mention in a
document in 1691, of twenty years' diligent service in India; but the first notice of him in print is
in describing the solemnity of proclaiming King James II., at Madras in August, 1685. There was
a grand procession of all the chief merchants, English and foreign, great numbers of the
inhabitants of the Gentoo town, with arms and elephants and kettle drums and native music,
besides twelve English trumpets; and in the chief place of honor was a troop commanded and
led by the President, and the rear brought up by Mr. Elihu Yale.* He had the reached, as appears
by the record of the succeeding month, the rank of second member of council, and less than two
years later had become the senior or first member, only subordinate, to the Governor or
President himself.
At this time the Sultan of Golconda, the petty Mohammedan ruler in whose domains the
English fort was situated, was attacked by the great Indian emperor, reigning at Delhi,
Aurung-Zeb, and there was need in the complications which might arise, of firmer qualities in
the Presidency at Madras than the present incumbent, Mr. Gifford, had shown.
Regular promotion was the principle of the service, and accordingly the directors in
London, acting by their Governor, Sir Josiah Child, the eminent writer on finance, sent Out
orders which were received at Madras on the 23d of July, 1687, retiring President Gifford, and appointing Elihu Yale his successor.
Two months later the great Mogul succeeded in conquering the fortress of Golconda, and
became master in consequence of the Northern Carnatic, the province including Madras; and so
it was one of the earliest public duties of our American-born President Yale to proclaim on the
part of Englishmen, the formal ceremonies of submission to the last and one of the greatest of
the great monarchs of India.
The Mogul proved to be dissatisfied with the small rental (about $2000 a year) paid for
the occupancy of the Madras territory, and attempted to extort additional sums; and threats were
heard of his intending to besiege the fort and destroy all the English in his dominions. The
defences were quietly strengthened in consequence, and at the same time conciliatory messages were sent to the Emperor, for which last the President was roundly rebuked by his superiors at home.
In 1689 the accession of William of Orange to the English throne, brought a new
complication. The rule of William meant war with France, and that meant for Madras a collision
between her commerce and the French settlement at Pondicherry, eighty miles down the coast.
But the same event brought the Dutch, who were nearer neighbors on the north, into closer
alliance, and the result of the only naval engagement of importance, which President Yale
superintended, was favorable to the allies.
Meantime the city throve and grew rich. Within the narrow limits of the island,
garrisoned by seven hundred soldiers, were crowded together about one hundred and thirty
houses, containing perhaps three hundred English and many more Portuguese; while within the
bounds of the whole territory was a population reckoned at three hundred thousand souls.
Over this multitude the President, acting with the advice of his council, was absolute; and
even by himself could wield very great power. The old traveler, Dr. Fryer, who visited Madras
about 1675, describes with gusto the Governor's magnificence; his personal guard of three or
four hundred blacks; how he never goes abroad without fifes, drums, trumpets, and a flag; being
carried in gorgeous palankeen, and shaded by an ostrich-feather fan.
But the records show that this splendor had its penalties. Year in and year out, a
succession of mighty quarrels raged between the Governor and his subordinates in the council,
which were relieved perhaps but not quenched, by towering accusations and recriminations.
The prime cause of the attacks on the President appears to have been certain frauds in
trading operations, alleged to have been committed by his brother, Thomas Yale, whose side the
President espoused. There were further charges against the President directly, of arbitrary
government, of neglect of duty, and of using the Company's funds for private speculation.
In answer to such charges, in 1691, he states that he has made honestly during twenty
years of diligent service and trading in India, above 500,000 pagodas, that is some
$900,000,-which in comparison with the ordinary fortunes of the time would be represented,
perhaps, according to our ideas in this century, by three or four millions, or perhaps more.[this was written in 1908] And as salaries were so insignificant, practically the whole of this large amount must have been derived from the profits of private
trade. References in letters from the Company seem to show that they regarded his success in accumulating as something extraordinary and not altogether creditable; and yet, that he was reckoned a public benefactor must be concluded from such a sentence
as this, in a letter of February, 1691, from the Court of Directors: "We desire our President, Mr. Yale, whom God hath blessed with so great an estate in our service, to set on foot another generous charitable work before he leaves India; that is, the
building of a church for the Protestant black people and Portuguese, and the slaves who serve them.
The squabbles in Council were brought, however, to the ears of the Directors, and
accompanied with other charges, especially of losing the trade with Sumatra.
A vote of censure was the final result, and a determination was reached about the
beginning of 1692 to remove Yale from office. It was not, however, until November 23d, in that
year, that the vessel arrived which bore the commission of his successor, and ended his reign of
five years and four months.
The settlement of outstanding accounts between him and the Company dragged through
two or three years, and if one may believe his representations to the home authorities, he was
grievously plundered by arbitrary seizure of his goods, as well as by legal decisions against him,
and was kept a prisoner at the Fort when longing to return to England, with design, as he says,
"to enforce him into despair, or otherwise to bring on him some distemper that may hasten his
death, which not long since by poison was near effected." (Wheeler's Madras, i, 289.)
There are ample replies to these charges from the new President and Council, detailing
their proceedings in conformity to law, but claiming that Yale had bribed the judges where he
could, and that his personal liberty had never been abridged. As to his suggestion of poison they
say:
"They that know him will doubtless conclude with us, either this bold reflection is no
more than the accustomary strains of wicked policy, or a salvo for his own credit against the
common reports of the unusual deaths of several of the Council when he was President; ... if
they had been living to declare, themselves, what others have since their death declared as from
them, some of Mr. Yale's instruments must have been prosecuted, and he would have been put
hard to it to clear his own reputation.''
As to poisoning him:
"There was never a report that ever we heard, of anything that would give him the least
color for such a suggestion since the year 1691, when there was a story told all about the town,
of a rogue that tempted Mrs. Nicks' slave wench to poison her mistress; and because Mrs. Nicks
then lived with Mr. Yale at his garden-house (which she and Mrs. Pavia, with their children,
have and do frequent to the scandal of Christianity among the heathens,) therefore he takes
occasion to suppose the design was against himself and to insinuate that the new President and
Council had a hand in it."
Probably the truth was not all on either side of the controversy; but after this we hear no
more of these charges.
It may be worth while to notice that Yale's successor as President was Nathaniel
Higginson, another American, and a native of Guilford in the old New Haven Colony. He was a
grandson of the Rev. Francis Higginson, first minister at Salem, whose widow after his early
death came to New Haven, probably because she was a sister to Governor Eaton. This may help
to explain how her grandson after graduating at Harvard College and going to England to seek
his fortune, followed Governor Eaton's grandson by marriage, Elihu Yale (who was Nathaniel
Higginson's senior by three or four years), to Madras, and by his help was started in a prosperous
career there. Truth obliges the statement that Higginson has left a cleaner record, both of
official and private life in the Indies, than his fellow-countryman and quasi-kinsman.
There is one other unpleasant story, which so far as is known first appeared in print in
1764, in the second edition of John Harris' Collection of Voyages (i, 917), to this effect -In
comment on the mildness of the penalties usually inflicted in the East India Government, it is
mentioned that President Yale hanged one of his grooms for riding a favorite horse of his
without leave, for two or three days' journey into the country to take the air; but that Yale was
tried on his return to England and heavily fined for the misdemeanor. Later writers enlarge the
account by stating that his return to England was in order to meet his trial for this murder.
The whole implication in the story as first told, is that it was an incident of his presidency; but as this does not appear among the various charges against him at the time and as full seven years elapsed before his return, and as no records of
the trial can be discovered in England, there is some doubt about the evidence. Not that it disagrees with his character; for it is stated that the conclusion of any who study the original documents must be that our hero, if hero at all, was like the
image in Nebuchadnezzar's dream; part of fine gold and part of iron and clay. His surroundings must be his most effective defence for a record of arrogance, cruelty, sensuality, and greed, while in power at Madras.
In 1699, however, at the age of fifty-one, he sailed for England. He found that his father, mother and brothers had died, and one of his first acts was to prove, as sole survivor of the family, the will made many years before.
Soon after his return, he built in London a stately residence, in Queen's Square, Great Ormond street, a little to the east of the present British Museum, the site of which is now probably occupied by a hospital, built in later years.
The Square was a fashionable locality, laid out and built up in the reign of Queen Anne, from whom came the name. Though now buried in the heart of London, it was then, and for at least fifty years later, quite on the outskirts of the city, and the
northern side was left open for the sake of the beautiful landscape, formed by the hills of Highgate and Hampstead, with the intervening fields.
That his was a palatial establishment and filled with works of art and curiosities of great value, appears from the fact that he received as insurance from the Sun Fire Office, in January 1719, on account of a recent fire in this house, the enormous
sum of o4,500
In connection with his return from India the story has been handed down that the first auction ever held in Great Britain was an auction of goods brought home with him and sold in 1700; but though this may have made an epoch in the history of
auctions, it is yet true that the system in its essentials can be traced further back:-see, for instance, Pepys' Diary for 1660 (Nov. 6), for a notice of the sale by inch of candle, a method of auction early in vogue, both on the Continent and in
England.(See, also, Notes sod Queries 5th series. xii. 95.)
It was on May 11, 1711, that Mr. Jeremiah Dummer, the agent at London for the Province of Massachusetts Bay, as later also for the Colony of Connecticut, first mentions in a letter to the Rev. James Pier-pont of New Haven, the principal founder of the
Collegiate School at Saybrook, that "Mr. Yale, formerly Governor of Fort St. George, who has got a prodigious estate," having no son, is sending to Connecticut for a relation to make him his heir; that is, I suppose, to secure the descent of the landed
property in Wales to one of the Yale name. "He told me lately," adds Dummer, "that he intended to bestow a charity upon some college in Oxford, under certain restrictions which he mentioned. But I think he should rather do it to your college, seeing
he is a New England and I think a Connecticut man. If, therefore, when his kinsman comes over, you will write him a proper letter on that subject, I will take care to press it home. (Bacon's Historical Discourses, 189).
Pierpont was not a man to neglect such an opportunity, and no doubt when young David Yale, a boy of fifteen, son of the oldest cousin of the governor, was sent over, in the year 1714, he carried "a proper letter," describing the achievements and
aspirations of the college at Saybrook.
About the same time Dummer was collecting from all his friends a gift of books for the college library, and when these (upwards of seven hundred volumes in all) were received in 1714, between thirty and forty volumes (the most from any single donor
except the collector himself) were marked as given by Governor Yale. The selection, which was presumably his own, is an uncommonly broad one; there are good representatives of theology, history, chronology, polite literature, classics, metaphysics,
natural science, medicine, political science, commerce, agriculture, military science, and architecture, providing we may say, some foundation for every one of the present departments in the university which was then so completely in embryo.
President Clap (Annals, p.23) has stated that another gift of three hundred volumes followed this three years later; but the contemporary records, which appear to be full on this subject, have no trace of it, and there is reason to think that the
statement is a wrong inference of Clap's, from a vote passed in 1717 with reference to other gifts by Dummer.
In October, 1716, a majority of the trustees of the Collegiate School voted to remove it from Saybrook to New Haven, and in the same month instruction was actually begun in temporary quarters here; and a year later the first college house was
raised,-that stupendous architectural monstrosity, which stood till the Revolution in front of the present South College. We may form a good idea of its appearance by imagining a wooden building the length of Durfee College, and of three-quarters its
height, but of only one-half the width, and painted moreover a beautiful cerulean color.
The trustees were utterly without resources to finish so elegant a building; but they had probably begun it with a more or less distinct hope of help from abroad, and in their extremity one good friend of the college, Dr. Cotton Mather, of Boston, was
appealed to, whose powers of persuasion proved equal to the need. On the 14th of January, 1718, he wrote to Governor Yale a remarkable letter, in which he praised skillfully the Governor's well-known charity, and solicits his favor towards the college
at New Haven; with a happy vein of prophecy, linking the two words that had never been joined before, as they now stand linked to all the future. "Sir," said he, "though you have felicities in your family, which, I pray, God continue and multiply, yet
certainly, if what is forming at New Haven might wear the name of YALE COLLEGE, it would be better than a name of sons and daughters. And your munificence might easily obtain for you a commemoration and perpetuation of your valuable name, which would
indeed be much better than an Egyptian pyramid." (Quincy's Hist. Of Harvard University, i, 524).
It is the fashion to sneer at Cotton Mather for his lively imagination and his overweening credulity; but no inspired vision could have given him firmer ground for his faith that was in him. The morsel, the merest fragment of his great possessions,
which the rich man, thoughtlessly perhaps, and possibly grudgingly, cast on the waters, in response to this appeal, has not been lost or scattered. It has brought to his name great honor, and fame more enduring than any possible material structure of
man.
Dummer, meantime, was "endeavoring to get a present from Mr. Yale for finishing the college;" and his interviews, seconded by such letters as Mather's, bore welcome fruit.
On June 11th, 1718, there were shipped from Governor Yale in a vessel bound for Boston, three bales or trunks of valuable goods, to be sold for the benefit of the college; and with these the full-length portrait of King George I., by Kneller, which
still graces the college collection, an escutcheon representing the royal arms, which was destroyed in the Revolution, and a large box of books, -the entire value of the gift being estimated at o800. An invoice of a part of the goods is still
preserved, with its enumeration of "25 pieces of garlix (whatever that may be), 18 pieces of calico, 17 pieces of stuff (that is, worsted goods), 12 pieces I Spanish poplin, 3 pieces plain muslin, 3 pieces camlet, and 2 of black and white silk crape;"
these being set down as worth o130 at prime cost, but bringing in Boston three times that amount. Besides there were other parcels sold unbroken at the same two hundred per cent advance,
making the entire proceeds of the gift, in hard money, o562, 12s. Three years elapsed before the goods were all sold and paid for, but it is probable the money was all swallowed up in meeting the bills for the erection of the new college, which is said
to have cost nearly o1,000. It was a crisis in the history of the institution; for though it is hard to imagine the turn of events if the trustees had not received this help, it seems extremely doubtful if they could have finished their new building at
once; and every delay would have strengthened immensely the faction opposed to the removal to New Haven, which now was conducting a rival college at Wethersfield, and which might very probably, but for this timely contribution, have succeeded in
endowing the rival and choking out the New Haven original.
It is saying little to note that this was by far the largest sum which the college during the first twenty years of its struggling existence had received from any private person. Nor should we judge from our modern notions of large endowments, that
Governor Yale earned his immortality too cheaply. It was really for those times a munificent gift; and the giver remained for a full century, the largest individual donor to college funds; until the receipt of $10,000 in 1837 from the estate of Dr.
Alfred B. Perkins, for the library.
The news of this great gift reached New Haven a few days before the Commencement celebration.
The story of that splendid and long remembered Commencement is no doubt familiar to all who have glanced at the annals of the college. On that bright September morning, in the year 1718, "we were favored and honored," writes the contemporary
chronicler, Tutor Johnson,
"with the presence of his Honor Governor Saltonstall and his lady, and the Honorable Colonel Tailer of Boston, and the Lieutenant Governor and whole Superior Court," also a great number of reverend ministers and a great concourse of spectators. The
trustees, meeting in the new building "first most solemnly" in the sonorous Latin periods still spread upon their records, "named our college by the name of Yale College - upon which the Hon. Col. Tailer," who had been sent over by Queen Anne as
Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts Bay, and who in anticipation of these festivities had made the toilsome journey from Boston, "represented Governor Yale in a speech, expressing his great satisfaction."
At the public exercises in the church, there was a pleasant rivalry in Latin compliments to the absent Maecenas from the salutatory orator of the graduating class (a son of James Pierpont), from one of the Trustees (a grandson of John Davenport), and
most elegantly of all from that superb old Puritan, Governor Saltonstall himself.
And before they separated the Trustees composed a profuse and painful letter of thanks, at which, as Dummer reports in due season, the old gentleman was more than a little pleased, "saving that he expressed at first some kind of concern whether it was
well in him, being a churchman, to promote an Academy of Dissenters. But when he had discoursed the point freely, he appeared convinced that the business of good men is to spread religion and learning among mankind, without being too fondly attached to
particular tenets about which the world never was, nor never will be, agreed. Besides," adds Dummer, "if the discipline of the Church of England be most agreeable to Scripture and primitive practice, there's no better way to make men sensible of it
than by giving them a good learning."
It is surely alike to the honor of the givers and of the recipients that the great benefactors of this College in its first century, Elihu Yale and George Berkeley, were both church
Father: Thomas YALE
Mother: Mary TURNER
Family 1
: Catherine
- MARRIAGE: 4 NOV 1680, St Mary's, Fort St George, Madras, India
Children:
- David YALE
- Catherine YALE
- Ann YALE
- Ursula YALE
Family 2
: ? PAVIA
- MARRIAGE: Not Married
Children:
- Charles YALE
_Thomas YALE ________+
| (1590 - 1619) m 1612
_Thomas YALE ________|
| (1616 - 1683) m 1645|
| |_Ann LLOYD __________+
| (1591 - 1659) m 1612
|
|--Elihu YALE
| (1649 - 1721)
| _Nathaniel TURNER ___
| | (1600 - 1645)
|_Mary TURNER ________|
(1624 - 1704) m 1645|
|_____________________
INDEX OF PERSONS
[NI5988]
[4630]
[S016790]
Elihue York YALE
28 OCT 1873 - WFT Est. 1874-1963
- BIRTH: 28 OCT 1873
[1897]
- DEATH: WFT Est. 1874-1963
[1898]
Father: Jessie Tiry YALE
Mother: Frances SPICER
_Vallet YALE ________+
| (1805 - 1892) m 1829
_Jessie Tiry YALE ___|
| (1839 - 1920) m 1866|
| |_Susanna PENNILL ____
| (1805 - ....) m 1829
|
|--Elihue York YALE
| (1873 - ....)
| _____________________
| |
|_Frances SPICER _____|
(1843 - 1900) m 1866|
|_____________________
INDEX OF PERSONS
[1896]
[S003057]
[1897]
[S003057]
[1898]
[S003057]
Elijah YALE
27 JAN 1852 - ____
- OCCUPATION: Railroad
- BIRTH: 27 JAN 1852, Danville, Quebec
- REFERENCE: yw1374
Father: Aretus Bristol YALE
Mother: Jane BELL
_Theophilus YALE ____+
| (1796 - 1875)
_Aretus Bristol YALE _|
| (1823 - 1888) |
| |_Lucinda WILLISTON __
| (1800 - 1852)
|
|--Elijah YALE
| (1852 - ....)
| _____________________
| |
|_Jane BELL ___________|
(.... - 1859) |
|_____________________
INDEX OF PERSONS
Eliza YALE
4 JUN 1806 - ____
- BIRTH: 4 JUN 1806
- REFERENCE: yw529
Father: Amasa YALE
Mother: Eunice WAY
Family 1
: Ambrose CULVER
- MARRIAGE: 1837
_Amasa YALE _________+
| (1747 - 1806) m 1768
_Amasa YALE _________|
| (1779 - 1821) m 1802|
| |_Anna RICHARDS ______
| (.... - 1800) m 1768
|
|--Eliza YALE
| (1806 - ....)
| _____________________
| |
|_Eunice WAY _________|
m 1802 |
|_____________________
INDEX OF PERSONS
Eliza YALE
14 DEC 1842 - 24 AUG 1843
- BIRTH: 14 DEC 1842, Middletown, Ct
- DEATH: 24 AUG 1843
- REFERENCE: yw1076
Father: Anson YALE
Mother: Mary A. FIELDS
_Elisha YALE ________+
| (1763 - 1840)
_Anson YALE _________|
| (1805 - 1849) m 1832|
| |_Rhonda CULVER ______
|
|
|--Eliza YALE
| (1842 - 1843)
| _____________________
| |
|_Mary A. FIELDS _____|
(1811 - ....) m 1832|
|_____________________
INDEX OF PERSONS
Eliza Celestina YALE
22 FEB 1843 - ____
- BIRTH: 22 FEB 1843, Norwalk, Ohio
- REFERENCE: yw1508
Father: Moses YALE
Mother: Ann ROWLAND
_Benjamin YALE ______+
| (1783 - 1824) m 1805
_Moses YALE _________|
| (1808 - 1889) |
| |_Abigail DELILAH ____
| (.... - 1869) m 1805
|
|--Eliza Celestina YALE
| (1843 - ....)
| _____________________
| |
|_Ann ROWLAND ________|
(1812 - 1893) |
|_____________________
INDEX OF PERSONS
Hannah Scoville YALE
13 DEC 1818 - 18 MAR 1847
- BIRTH: 13 DEC 1818, Meriden, Ct
- DEATH: 18 MAR 1847, Meriden, Ct
- REFERENCE: yw893
Father: Levi YALE
Mother: Anna GUY
Family 1
: Ira Newell YALE
- MARRIAGE: 1839
_Nathaniel YALE _____+
| (1753 - 1814) m 1778
_Levi YALE __________|
| (.... - 1844) m 1816|
| |_Hannah SCOVILLE ____
| (1760 - 1847) m 1778
|
|--Hannah Scoville YALE
| (1818 - 1847)
| _____________________
| |
|_Anna GUY ___________|
(1800 - 1882) m 1816|
|_____________________
INDEX OF PERSONS
Joseph YALE
7 OCT 1770 - 1841
- OCCUPATION: Manufactured Spruce Beer.
- BIRTH: 7 OCT 1770
- DEATH: 1841
- REFERENCE: yw-239
Father: Amasa YALE
Mother: Anna RICHARDS
Family 1
: Lois HITCHCOCK
- MARRIAGE: 1799
Children:
- +Vallet YALE
_Samuel YALE ________+
| (1710 - 1754) m 1735
_Amasa YALE _________|
| (1747 - 1806) m 1768|
| |_Susannah ABERNETHY _+
| (1712 - 1770) m 1735
|
|--Joseph YALE
| (1770 - 1841)
| _____________________
| |
|_Anna RICHARDS ______|
(.... - 1800) m 1768|
|_____________________
INDEX OF PERSONS
Joseph YALE
6 JAN 1871 - ____
- OCCUPATION: farmer
- BIRTH: 6 JAN 1871, Shirland, Ill
- REFERENCE: yw1368
Father: Elon Lee YALE
Mother: Susan E. WOODWORTH
_Theophilus YALE ____+
| (1796 - 1875)
_Elon Lee YALE ______|
| (1818 - 1897) m 1845|
| |_Lucinda WILLISTON __
| (1800 - 1852)
|
|--Joseph YALE
| (1871 - ....)
| _____________________
| |
|_Susan E. WOODWORTH _|
(1827 - ....) m 1845|
|_____________________
INDEX OF PERSONS
Lodema YALE
20 FEB 1787 - ____
- BIRTH: 20 FEB 1787
- REFERENCE: yw-385
Father: Nathaniel YALE
Mother: Hannah SCOVILLE
Family 1
: Titus IVES
_Abel YALE __________+
| (1706 - 1784) m 1742
_Nathaniel YALE _____|
| (1753 - 1814) m 1778|
| |_Sarah ATKINS _______
| (.... - 1800) m 1742
|
|--Lodema YALE
| (1787 - ....)
| _____________________
| |
|_Hannah SCOVILLE ____|
(1760 - 1847) m 1778|
|_____________________
INDEX OF PERSONS
Lucelia Theresa YALE
5 SEP 1812 - ____
- BIRTH: 5 SEP 1812
- REFERENCE: yw934
Father: Burrage YALE
Mother: Sarah S. BOARDMAN
Family 1
: Nathan MUNROE
- MARRIAGE: 22 JUN 1842
Children:
- Mary Jame MUNROE
- Sarah Smith MUNROE
_Amerton YALE _______+
| (1756 - 1807)
_Burrage YALE _______|
| (1781 - 1860) m 1808|
| |_Sarah MERRIMAN _____
| (.... - 1788)
|
|--Lucelia Theresa YALE
| (1812 - ....)
| _____________________
| |
|_Sarah S. BOARDMAN __|
(1784 - 1844) m 1808|
|_____________________
INDEX OF PERSONS
Mary Esther YALE
17 JUL 1867 - ____
- BIRTH: 17 JUL 1867, Meriden
- BURIAL: "MEY"? in Broad Street Cemetary
- REFERENCE: yw1965
Father: Julius Wilcox YALE
Mother: Mary Cooley HOBART
Family 1
: William H. BALDWIN
- MARRIAGE: 25 DEC 1899
Children:
- Nathan Yale BALDWIN
_Julius YALE _________+
| (1793 - 1867) m 1827
_Julius Wilcox YALE _|
| (1834 - 1922) m 1862|
| |_Polly Norton WILCOX _+
| (1800 - 1883) m 1827
|
|--Mary Esther YALE
| (1867 - ....)
| ______________________
| |
|_Mary Cooley HOBART _|
(1839 - 1906) m 1862|
|______________________
INDEX OF PERSONS
Theopilus YALE
____ - ____
- BIRTH: Boston
- REFERENCE: yw-25
Father: David YALE
Mother: Ursula
_Thomas YALE ________+
| (1590 - 1619) m 1612
_David YALE _________|
| (1614 - 1689) m 1641|
| |_Ann LLOYD __________+
| (1591 - 1659) m 1612
|
|--Theopilus YALE
|
| _____________________
| |
|_Ursula _____________|
(1624 - 1697) m 1641|
|_____________________
INDEX OF PERSONS
Willis YALE
30 JUL 1793 - 17 DEC 1793
- BIRTH: 30 JUL 1793
- DEATH: 17 DEC 1793
- REFERENCE: yw-303
Father: Benjamin YALE
Mother: Phebe RICE
_Benjamin YALE ______+
| (1713 - 1781) m 1736
_Benjamin YALE ______|
| (1749 - 1852) m 1781|
| |_Ruth IVES __________
| (.... - 1777) m 1736
|
|--Willis YALE
| (1793 - 1793)
| _____________________
| |
|_Phebe RICE _________|
(.... - 1843) m 1781|
|_____________________
INDEX OF PERSONS