GAGE, Thomas, British soldier,
born in Firle, Sussex, in 1721 ; died in England, 2 April, 1787. He was the
second son of Thomas Gage, Viscount Gage of Castle Island, and Baron Gage of
Castlebar. He was appointed major of the 44th regiment in February, 1747, and at
the time of Braddock's expedition had risen to
the rank of lieutenant-colonel. His command was the first to receive the
onslaught of the French and Indians at Monongahela, 9 September, 1755. Although
himself injured, he rallied the troops to aid in taking Braddock, who was
mortally wounded, to a place of safety. His account of the battle, made in a
statement to Chalmers for his "Annals," is printed in the "Massachusetts
Historical Society Collections," vol. 34.
He accompanied General Abererombie on his Ticonderoga expedition in 1758, as
colonel of the 80th regiment of light-infantry. General Amherst, in August,
1759, gave him command of the Ontario department, and as a brigadier-general he
participated in the campaign for the conquest of Canada in 1759. On the
capitulation of Montreal in September, 1760, he was appointed military governor
of the City, and his mild administration of this department contrasted favorably
with the severity of Murray's government of the Quebec district. The 22d
regiment was assigned to him in June, 1762, and in December, 1763, he succeeded
Amherst as commander-in-chief in America, with headquarters at New York. In 1765
he surrendered the stamped paper to the municipality. He directed the affairs of
the army until February, 1773, when he sailed for England, leaving General
Haldimand in command, that officer coming from the southern, or Florida,
department, where he had been in control since 1766. Gate's correspondence with
Haldimand during this period is contained in the "Haldimand
Collection" in the British museum, copies of which have been made for
the Canadian archives, and calendered in the annual report of the archive
department.
In a letter to Haldimand from London, 4 April, 1774, Gage writes that he has
been ordered to Boston with four regiments, to bring the people to submission
and enforce the coercive measures of the government. He arrived in Boston on 13
May, 1774, and on the 17th, having spent four days with Hutchinson at Castle
William, was received with ceremony by the council and civil officers, and the
proclamation of his commission was signalized by volleys of musketry and cheers
of the populace. In a public dinner in Faneuil Hall he proposed "the
prosperity of the town of Boston." But the hopes entertained of his
acting as an adjuster of the differences between the colonies and the mother
country were short-lived.
He came to Boston as the civil, but in reality military, governor of the
province. He had some acquaintance with the Bostonians on a visit in 1768, when
he came at the request of the king to quell the disturbances in regard to
quartering of the British troops. The results of his observations are given in
two publications, entitled " Letters to the Ministry from Governor
Barnard, General Gage, and Commodore Hood," and "Letters to the
Earl of Hillsborough from Governor Barnard, General Gage, and the Council of the
Province of Massachusetts Bay" (Boston, 1769). The aspersions on the
people of Boston in those letters drew out an "Appeal to the World"
by Samuel Adams.
Immediately upon receiving official notice of their passage, Gage
proceeded to put into effect the Boston port bill, and the offensive measures of
the regulation act. On 30 June, 1774, he issued a proclamation denouncing the
solemn league and covenant as unwarrantable, hostile, and traitorous, and
threatening its promoters with arrest. The text of this document is printed in
the "Massachusetts Historical Society's Collections," vol. 12.
During the summer months of 1774, Gage had his headquarters at Salem, that
being, under the port bill, the capital, and the mandamus council being held
there. Early in 1775 he sent expeditions to Marshfield Jamaica Plains, and
Salem, to seize military stores and disperse the militia. On the night of 18
April a large force departed from Boston, on what Gage intended to be a secret
expedition to Concord and Lexington, to get
possession of cannon and ammunition belonging to the Provincials, and on the
following day took place the memorable conflict between the minutemen and Gage's
soldiers, which resulted in the discomfiture of the British. Gage's account of
the battle of 19 April is printed in facsimile in the "Memorial History
of Boston."
On 12 June he gave vent to his displeasure at the state of affairs in another
proclamation, characterizing those in arms as rebels and traitors, but promising
pardon to all on submission, excepting Samuel Adams and John Hancock. The
Americans fortified Breed's (Bunker) Hill
on the night of 16 June, and on the following day Gage sent General
Howe with a large force to dislodge them. In spite of contrary advice, Gage
determined that the works should be attacked in front. A Tory historian relates
that he told his advisers he was going "to take the bull by the
horns," and adds: "It is remarkable that the general, during
the continuance of his command in America, never once ventured an attack upon
American intrenchments; he had fatally experienced the consequences of taking
the bull by the horns."
Immediately upon receiving Gage's account of the battle of Bunker
Hill, the government ordered his recall, and he sailed for England, 10
October, 1775. A brief review of his services in America, in his own words, is
given in "Queries of George Chahners, with the Answers of General Gage,
in Relation to Braddock's Expedition, Stamp Act, and Gage's Administration of
the Government of Massachusetts Bay," published in the "Massachusetts
Historical Society's Collections," vol. 34. His subsequent career was
uneventful. In April, 1782, he was appointed colonel of the 17th light dragoons,
promoted to the rank of general in November, 1783, and in 1785 was transferred
to the 11th dragoons. He married, 8 December 1758, Margaret, daughter of Peter
Kemble, president of the council of New Jersey. One of his sons became third
Viscount Gage. The following works represent contemporaneous publications
relative to his conduct of affairs at the opening of the Revolution: "General
Gage's Instructions of 22 February, 1775, to Captain Brown, whom he ordered to
take a Sketch of the Roads, etc., from Boston to Worcester" (Boston,
1775; reprinted in the Collections of the Massachusetts historical society, vol.
14); "Narrative of the Excursions and Ravages of the King's Forces,
under Command of General Gage, 19 April, 1775" (Worcester, 1775) ; "Lord
Chum's Prophecy, an Ode to Lieutenant-General Gage" (London, 1776); "Letters
of the Two Commanders-in-Chief, Generals Gage and Washington" (New
York, 1775) ; "Detail and Conduct of the American War, under General
Gage" (London, 1780).
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