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  1. Margaret Kemble Gage (1734–1824) was the wife of General Thomas Gage, who led the British Army in Massachusetts in the American Revolutionary War. It is alleged that she played an important role in the outcome of the American Revolution.

  2. 8 de abr. de 2012 · Margaret Kemble Gage is the wife of the British General Thomas Gage around the time of the American Revolutionary War. Although she loved her husband, it is believed that she was a sympathizer to the rebels in the American Revolution.

  3. 31 de oct. de 2021 · The Hero returns from Boston is a rare Revolutionary War print depicting Margaret Kemble Gage welcoming her husband, General Thomas Gage, home to England.

  4. His first subject was Margaret Kemble Gage, the American-born wife of General Thomas Gage, commander-in-chief of the British forces in NorthAmerica, who had sat for a portrait by the artist in 1768. Mrs. Gage wears a turban-like swath of drapery, a silk caftan over a lace-trimmed chemise, andan embroidered belt—a Turkish-style costume that ...

  5. Margaret Kemble Gage (1734–1824) was the wife of General Thomas Gage, who led the British Army in Massachusetts in the American Revolutionary War. She was born in New Brunswick, Province of New Jersey, and lived in East Brunswick Township.

  6. 20 de ene. de 2017 · She may have been a spy – the general’s lady, Margaret. She was the wife of Thomas Gage, officer in the service of his Majesty, King George III, a veteran of the wars between the French and their native Indian allies the British colonials settled along the mostly-temperate shores of North America, Thomas Gage was a commander and ...

  7. Gage had also married Margaret Kemble, an American from Brunswick, New Jersey. Once the French surrendered Canada in 1760, Gage was promoted to Major General, served for several years as governor of Montreal, and then succeeded Amherst as commander-in-chief of the 8,000 men whom, on paper, comprised the British forces in America.