# Benjamin Gale

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{{short description|American physician, scientist, agriculturist and political polemicist (1715–1790)}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=August 2022}}
{{Infobox scientist
| name              = Benjamin Gale
| image             = 
| image_size        = 
| caption           = 
| birth_date        = {{Birth date|1715|12|14}}
| birth_place       = [Jamaica](/source/Jamaica%2C_New_York), [Queens](/source/Queens), New York U.S.
| death_date        = {{Death date and age|1790|5|6|1715|12|14}}{{Efn|Some sources wrongly state May 21, 1790, as his death date.}}
| death_place       = [Killingworth](/source/Killingworth%2C_Connecticut), [Middlesex County](/source/Middlesex_County%2C_Connecticut), [Connecticut](/source/Connecticut) U.S.
| spouse            = {{marriage|Hannah Eliot|1739|1781|reason=died}}
| children          = 8
| fields            = 
| academic_advisors = [Jared Eliot](/source/Jared_Eliot)
| alma_mater        = [Yale University](/source/Yale_University) ([A.M.](/source/Master_of_Arts))
| signature         = 
}}
'''Benjamin Gale''' (December 14, 1715{{spaced ndash}}May 6, 1790) was an American physician, scientist, [agriculturist](/source/agriculturist), inventor and [political polemicist](/source/Polemic) who was known for his political protests against the [New Lights](/source/Old_and_New_Lights), which resulted in a fifteen year [pamphlet war](/source/pamphlet_war) against leader [Thomas Clap](/source/Thomas_Clap), and was himself considered a leader of [Old Light](/source/Old_Lights) politics in [Connecticut](/source/Connecticut).

Gale was born in [Jamaica, Queens](/source/Jamaica%2C_Queens). After graduating from [Yale University](/source/Yale_University), he moved to [Killingworth, Connecticut](/source/Killingworth%2C_Connecticut), where he further studied medicine and surgery. Throughout the next decade he would indulge in several business ventures and investments, which led to his invention of the [drill plough](/source/drill_plough). He was elected as [justice of the peace](/source/justice_of_the_peace) and [state representative](/source/Connecticut_House_of_Representatives) in 1747, and would serve in those capacities until 1773 and 1770 respectively.

In 1755, Gale would publish his first pamphlet against Thomas Clap, which he wrote as a response against an earlier pamphlet written by Clap. This pamphlet ended up being successful, prompting a pamphlet war with Clap throughout the next fifteen years, which ended in Clap's eventual resignation in 1766.

Throughout his later life, Gale went on several ventures as an inventor, vintner and distiller. After surviving a serious illness in 1788, Gale eventually fell ill again which led to his death in 1790.

== Early life and education ==
Benjamin Gale was born on December 14, 1715, in [Jamaica, New York](/source/Jamaica%2C_New_York), to John Gale, and Mary.{{Sfn|Stark|2000}} His paternal ancestor, Edmond Gale, came to [Cambridge, Massachusetts](/source/Cambridge%2C_Massachusetts), in the early 17th century from [England](/source/England), and died in [Boston](/source/Boston).{{Sfn|Whittemore|1884|p=241}} Edmond's son, Abel,{{Efn|Alternatively spelled Abell.}} then came to Jamaica where he bought land, on which he built his residence, on October 18, 1665.{{Sfn|Gale|1866|p=191}} Abel's son and Benjamin's father, John, was a [miller](/source/miller), owning multiple mills in [Long Island](/source/Long_Island), until 1721, when he sold all of his mills for [£](/source/%C2%A3)1500.{{Sfn|Groce|1937|p=697}} John then moved to [Goshen, New York](/source/Goshen%2C_New_York), the same year, becoming a [proprietor](/source/proprietor) of the then newly-established town.{{Sfn|Gale|1866|p=195}}

Shortly after his settlement in Goshen, Benjamin was educated by [Samuel Johnson](/source/Samuel_Johnson_(American_educator)) at his home in [Stratford, Connecticut](/source/Stratford%2C_Connecticut),{{Sfn|Stark|2000}} as Johnson was known to instruct young New Yorkers.{{Sfn|Groce|1937|p=698}} There, he was taught [Latin](/source/Latin) and [Greek](/source/Greek_language), which he retained working knowledge of throughout his life.{{Sfn|Groce|1937|p=698}} At the age of thirteen, Gale was enrolled into [Yale University](/source/Yale_University), where he graduated in 1733, and received his [Master of Arts](/source/Master_of_Arts) three years later.{{Sfn|Dexter|1885|p=474}}

After his graduation, Gale moved to the village of [Killingworth, Connecticut](/source/Killingworth%2C_Connecticut), where he studied medicine and surgery under [Jared Eliot](/source/Jared_Eliot).{{Sfn|Dexter|1885|p=477}} On June 6, 1739, Gale married Jared's daughter Hannah, with whom he had eight children, making him the [son-in-law](/source/son-in-law) of Jared.{{Sfn|Groce|1937|p=698}}

== Career ==
=== 1740–1746 Business ventures and investments ===
Though never being considered wealthy, Gale had several business ventures and investments, including trading horses to the [West Indies](/source/West_Indies). He also built and operated [steel mill](/source/steel_mill), along with his brother-in-law Aaron Eliot, until as late as 1787.{{Sfn|Groce|1937|p=699}} Jared had made some unsuccessful experiments of an early prototype of the [drill plough](/source/drill_plough), and after his death, Gale continued to work on the prototype, and sent a model to the [Royal Society of Arts](/source/Royal_Society_of_Arts),{{Sfn|Groce|1937|p=708}} and was subsequently awarded with a gold medal in January 1770.{{Sfn|Stark|2000}} Though this was then seen as a controversy, when Benoni Hillyer, a wheelwright who built the model, claimed that he was the sole constructor of it and that Gale had only acted as an agent communicating with the society.{{Sfn|Groce|1937|p=708}} Hillfyer then unsuccessfully filed a fifty-pound damage suit against Gale.{{Sfn|Groce|1937|p=708}}

He also owned two [acres](/source/acres) of land within a mile of his residence and acquired six slaves, and managed 200 further acres of land in 1767, on his wife's inheritance of his father-in-law.{{Sfn|Groce|1937|p=699}} Later, he constructed a "mansion house", which was then used as a tavern after his death.{{Sfn|Groce|1937|p=699}}

=== 1747–1773 Political activities and the pamphlet war against Thomas Clap ===
Gale was firstly elected [justice of the peace](/source/justice_of_the_peace) in May 1747, serving continuously for twenty-two years until 1773, except for four years from 1755 to 1759,{{Sfn|Stark|2000}} due to the [French and Indian War](/source/French_and_Indian_War) causing him to have heavy responsibilities as a Killingworth [state representative](/source/Connecticut_House_of_Representatives),{{Sfn|Groce|1937|p=699}} in which capacity he served from May 1747 to October 1770.{{Sfn|Stark|2000}} He was allied with the [Old Lights](/source/Old_Lights), due to his unwillingness to accept the strict [Calvinism](/source/Calvinism) of the [New Lights](/source/Old_and_New_Lights),{{Sfn|Groce|1937|p=700}} and when [governor](/source/Governor_of_Connecticut) [Roger Wolcott](/source/Roger_Wolcott_(Connecticut_politician)) was voted out of office in 1754, it is thought that one factor was him dropping the repressive laws against the New Lights, of which Gale and other Old Lights were of opposition, which was criticized by a political enemy, hinting to the fact that he was the reason Wolcott was voted out, as Gale was considered a leader of the Old Lights in Connecticut politics.{{Sfn|Groce|1937|p=700–701}}

Subsequently in 1755, Gale began his [avocation](/source/avocation) of added control and launched a political attack on [Yale](/source/Yale) [president](/source/President_of_Yale) [Thomas Clap](/source/Thomas_Clap),{{Sfn|Stark|2000}} who was quoted as a "calm and still judicious great Man," who was firm to the point of "absolute "Despotism", and as such seen as a strategic and vulnerable target.{{Sfn|Groce|1937|p=701–702}} Gale wrote ''The Present State of the Colony of Connecticut Considered'', in which he called Clap "an Assuming, Arbitrary, Designing Man; who under a Cloak of Zeal for Orthodoxy, design'd to govern both Church and State and Damn all who would not worship the Beast", as response to Clap's pamphlet, which he wrote in 1754 at the time of Wolcott's defeat, called ''The Religious Constitution of Colleges, Especially of Yale-College'',{{Sfn|Stark|2000}} in which he pointed out that Yale had been founded and governed by [ministers](/source/Minister_(Christianity)) for the purpose of properly training the [clergy](/source/clergy).{{Sfn|Groce|1937|p=702}} This attack was successful, leading to a decline in standards of political decorum and an increased political bitterness, subsequently prompting a [pamphlet war](/source/pamphlet_war) with Clap throughout the next fifteen years.{{Sfn|Stark|2000}}

The next pamphlet called ''A Letter to a Member of the Lower House of Assembly of the Colony of Connecticut: Shewing, That the Taxes at Yale-College, Are Stated Higher Than Necessary to Defray the Annual Expences'' was published in March 1759, by Gale,{{Sfn|Stark|2000}} in which he claimed that Yale was not only making a profit of students' fees, but also that Clap should be investigated by the [Connecticut General Assembly](/source/Connecticut_General_Assembly).{{Sfn|Groce|1937|p=703}} Though no investigation was launched, Reverend John Graham accepted the challenge of his pamphlet, causing Clap to again be the centre of another pamphlet war.{{Sfn|Groce|1937|p=703}}

This pamphlet led to even more criticism to Clap's administration, and though Gale eventually withdrew from the controversy, his pamphlets continued to be used against Clap's administration leading to his resignation after a dramatic defense in 1766.{{Sfn|Groce|1937|p=703}}

== Later life and death ==
Gale helped bring attention to [Abel Buell](/source/Abel_Buell)'s experiments with [type-founding](/source/Movable_type), sending them to prominent [New England](/source/New_England) intellectuals and some specimen to the [American Philosophical Society](/source/American_Philosophical_Society), of which he was one of the earliest [Connecticut](/source/Connecticut) members.{{Sfn|Groce|1937|p=708–709}} Along this, in 1775, he helped [David Bushnell](/source/David_Bushnell_(inventor)) with his experiments of the [American Turtle](/source/American_Turtle), providing his assistance.{{Sfn|Groce|1937|p=709}}

An amateur vintner and distiller, Gale sent a specimen of his grape wine [Peter Collinson](/source/Peter_Collinson_(botanist)), who dubbed him as "the American [Bacchus](/source/Bacchus_(grape))".{{Sfn|Groce|1937|p=709}} More than ten years thereafter, he served [Ezra Stiles](/source/Ezra_Stiles) with a drink called "Spirits", which he had distilled from [corn syrup](/source/corn_syrup).{{Sfn|Groce|1937|p=709}}

Gale was the examining surgeon for Connecticut army physicians and, in 1787, was selected as the first president of the [Connecticut Medical Society](/source/The_Connecticut_State_Medical_Society).{{Efn|This was before the Connecticut Medical Society had been granted a charter by the legislature in 1792.{{Sfn|Groce|1937|p=715}}}}{{Sfn|Groce|1937|p=710}}

In 1788, Gale survived a serious illness, but two years later, he fell ill again leading to his death on May 6, 1790.{{Sfn|Groce|1937|p=714}} After his death, a will he had written in 1788, was "Judged Illegal" by a [probate court](/source/probate_court), due to doubts about his mental competence.{{Sfn|Stark|2000}}

== Note ==
{{Notelist}}

== References ==
{{Reflist}}

== Works cited ==
* {{Cite book|last=Stark |first=Bruce P. |date=2000 |orig-date=1999 |title=Gale, Benjamin |chapter=Gale, Benjamin (1715-1790), physician, scientist, and political polemicist |url=https://www.anb.org/view/10.1093/anb/9780198606697.article.0100308 |access-date=August 9, 2022 |website=[American National Biography](/source/American_National_Biography) |publisher=[Oxford University Press](/source/Oxford_University_Press) |doi=10.1093/anb/9780198606697.article.0100308 |isbn=978-0-19-860669-7 |url-access=subscription }}
* {{cite journal |last1=Groce |first1=George C. |title=Benjamin Gale |journal=[The New England Quarterly](/source/The_New_England_Quarterly) |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/359933 |date=1937 |volume=10 |issue=4 |pages=697–716 |publisher=[MIT Press](/source/MIT_Press) |issn=0028-4866 |doi=10.2307/359933 |jstor=359933 |url-access=subscription }}
* {{cite book |last = Whittemore |first = Henry |year = 1884 |title = History of Middlesex county, Connecticut, with biographical sketches of its prominent men |url = https://archive.org/details/cu31924097556595/ |pages = 240–241 |location = New York |publisher = J.B. Beers & Co }}
* {{cite book |last = Gale |first = George |year = 1866 |title = The Gale family records in England and the United States, to which are added some account of the Tottingham family of New England, and Bogardus, Waldron, and Young families of New York |url = https://archive.org/details/galefamilyrecord00gale/page/188/mode/2up |pages = 188–202 |location = Galesville |publisher = Leith & Gale }}
* {{cite book |last = Dexter |first = Franklin Bowditch |author-link=Franklin Bowditch Dexter |year = 1885 |title = Biographical sketches of the graduates of Yale College : with annals of the college history |url = https://archive.org/details/biographicalske06unkngoog/page/474/mode/2up |pages = 474–480 |location = New York |publisher = [Henry Holt and Company](/source/Henry_Holt_and_Company) }}

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{{DEFAULTSORT:Gale, Benjamin}}
Category:1715 births
Category:1790 deaths
Category:18th-century American medical doctors
Category:18th-century American inventors
Category:American agriculturalists
Category:Yale University alumni
Category:Inventors from New York (state)
Category:Medical doctors from colonial Connecticut

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Adapted from the Wikipedia article [Benjamin Gale](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benjamin_Gale) by Wikipedia contributors ([contributor history](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benjamin_Gale?action=history)). Available under [Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/). Changes may have been made.
