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  1. Thomas Gage. 1719 or 1720 - 2 April 1787. Thomas Gage, a decorated war hero in the French and Indian War, served as the commander in chief of the British Forces in North America from 1763-74. He arrived in Boston in May 1774 to replace Thomas Hutchinson as royal governor of Massachusetts. Charged with enforcing the Coercive Acts, Gage soon ...

  2. revolutionary-war.org › british-empire › thomas-gageBritish Empire | Thomas Gage

    GAGE, THOMAS (1721-1787) , British general and governor of Massachusetts, second son of the first Viscount Gage, was born in 1721. He entered the army in 1741 and saw service in Flanders and in the campaign of Culloden, becoming lieutenant-colonel in the 44th foot in March 1751.

  3. Prêtre dominicain au service de l’Espagne, Thomas Gage pense que s’il est normal d’accorder des privilèges aux espagnols venus dans le Nouveau monde, les amérindiens doivent aussi conserver leurs droits. Né en 1603 dans une famille de pieux catholiques, Thomas Gage était destiné à devenir jésuite.

  4. Thomas Gage and the Battle of Lexington and Concord. On 18 April 1775 Gage ordered his redcoats to march to the nearby town of Lexington, where, according to rumours, weapons had been hidden by the Boston rebels. But in Lexington, Gage's 700 troops were obstructed by 70 armed men who refused to let them into their town.

  5. 7 de jun. de 2023 · Thomas Gage was the British Commander charged with keeping the peace in the colonies. Did he face an impossible task – or did he fail spectacularly in his mi...

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    • American Battlefield Trust
  6. Gage, Thomas. Fray Tomás de Santa María.. ¿Croyton?, Surrey (Reino Unido), c. 1602 – Jamaica, 1656.Cronista y religioso dominico (OP). Hijo de John Gage y Margaret Copley, estudió en el colegio jesuita de Saint Omer (Lovaina) y en los dominicos de San Gregorio o San Pablo (Valladolid), donde profesó en 1624, con el nombre de fray Tomás de Santa María.

  7. 1. General Thomas Gage was a British Army general officer and colonial official best known for his many years of service in North America, including his role as British commander-in-chief in the early days of the American Revolution. 2. Firle Place, Firle, Sussex, is where the Gage family had been seated since the 15th century.