His daughter, Sarah Yale, became the great-grandmother of abolitionist Congressman Sherlock James Andrews, who welcomed Abraham Lincoln at Cleveland during his presidential visit.[1]
Theophilus Yale is recorded among the early settlers and proprietors of the town of Wallingford, along with his father Capt. Yale.[6] He became a magistrate from about 1724, at 49 years old, to the end of his life in 1760, and occupied various offices in the city and the military.[4][7][2] He was described as a "true servant of the people".[8] Yale was made Justice of the Peace of New Haven from 1727 to 1729, and performed 4 marriages, which under the Puritans, could only be performed by a civil magistrate.[9] On May 14, 1734, Yale is recorded as a witness for a concession of 75 aces, in the County of New Haven, to James Scoville of Scoville Hill in Harwinton, Connecticut.[10]
In 1735, Yale is recorded as a Deputy of the Connecticut House of Representatives, representing Wallingford with Capt. Benjamin Hall, and would stay for most of his political career.[11] The Assembly, presided by Gov. Joseph Talcott and Deputy Gov. Jonathan Law, had in attendance the other deputies such as Col. David Goodrich, Roger Wolcott, Jonathan Trumbull, Thomas Fitch, William Pitkin, and many others representing different cities across the State.[11] They elected a few lieutenants and captains to be in charge of the trainbands in various cities. Yale was among the deputies present for the re-election of Gov. Talcott in 1737.[11]
In 1739, he is appointed by the assembly to form a committee to hear the records of the acts of the assembly read off and compleated, with Capt. Isaac Dickerman, Capt. Benjamin Hall, Capt. John Riggs, Capt. Samuel Bassett, Capt. John Russell, and 5 others.[11] He is reappointed Justice of the Peace of New Haven County in 1736, a few times more in 1737, 1739, 1740, 1741, and once more in 1742 for the next year ensuing.[12]
In 1742, at a meeting of the Convocation of New Haven County, Theophilus Yale, as a member of the First Church of Wallingford, launched a complaint against Harvard graduate, Rev. Philemon Robbins, pastor of the First Church in Branford.[13][14] The controversy concerned the Newlightism preaching of Rev. Robbins to the Baptists of Wallingford, whose group were not within his defined territory.[15][13] His behavior, called disorderly and offensive in conduct to the laws of God, ended up in a trial, and Robbins was excluded from the council with criminal charges.[15][13] Yale served as a magistrate until his death.[4]
Capt. Yale's daughter Sarah became the great-grandmother of abolitionist Congressman Sherlock James Andrews, who also graduated from Yale.[25] Capt. Yale's brother-in-law, John Peck, was the nephew of Rev. Jeremiah Peck, a founder of Newark, New Jersey, and first rector of Hopkins Grammar School, funded by Theophilus's granduncle, Gov. Edward Hopkins of England.[26][27]
Capt. Theophilus Yale died on September 13, 1760.[2] His wife died at the home of her son-in-law named Joseph Hough, in Wallingford, on November 28, 1795, at 94 years of age.[2] They had 7 children.[3]
Sarah Yale (1716-1784), became the wife of Capt. Joshua Atwater, and the great-grandmother of abolitionist Congressman Sherlock James Andrews, who was a graduate from Yale and the 1st President of the Cleveland Bar Association.[25] He was also the son-in-law of Congressman John W. Allen, Mayor of Cleveland, and was related to the Griswold family and the Clay family.[36]
^Theophilus Yale, National Portrait Gallery, China Trade Portrait, Catalog of American Portraits, Slater Memorial Museum, Object Number : 180.260, 1818