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  1. Margaret Kemble Gage, née en 1734 à New Brunswick dans la province du New Jersey et morte en 1824, est l'épouse du général britannique Thomas Gage. Le mariage est célébré en 1758 et le couple joue un rôle proéminent dans la société de New York pendant plus de 10 ans. Thomas Gage dirige l'armée britannique au début de la guerre d'indépendance des États-Unis .

  2. 27 de ago. de 2021 · What seems to have gotten lost in the shuffle here – most likely from this being re-quoted—is that this letter is NOT addressed to Margaret Kemble Gage. It is addressed to “Lady Gage,” Elizabeth Gideon Gage, the wife of Thomas Gage’s older brother, William Hall, 2nd Viscount Gage.

  3. Family tree of Margaret KEMBLE GAGE. Companion. Born Margaret KEMBLE. Wife of General Thomas Gage, who led the British Army during the American Revolutionary War, and is said to have spied against him out of sympathy for the Revolution. Born on 1734 in New Brunswick, New Jersey, USA , United States. Died on January 1, 1824.

  4. 8 de jun. de 2018 · The Kemble family was of French, Greek, Dutch, and English ancestry. For the next year Gage courted Margaret Kemble through visits and letters. On December 7, 1758, Gage married his American sweetheart in an Anglican (Church of England) ceremony at her home in Mount Kemble. Gage's new brother-in-law, Stephen, was an ensign in Gage's regiment.

  5. Margaret Kemble was the great-granddaughter of Mayor of New York City Stephanus Van Cortlandt and Gertrude Schuyler of the Schuyler family. She was the daughter of Peter Kemble, a well-to-do New Jersey businessman and politician, and of Gertrude Bayard. Together they had eleven children. Their first son, the future 3rd Viscount Gage, was born ...

  6. Granddaughter of New York City Mayor, Stephanus Van Cortlandt and daughter of Peter Kemble, a successful businessman and politician, Margaret and Thomas were wed on December 8, 1758. Though never proven guilty of spying, General Gage sent his wife home to England at the start of the war.

  7. 7 de jul. de 2021 · The plans that General Thomas Gage devised for April 19, 1775, were only shared with a few people in his inner circle, though there are indications that Warren and his colleagues knew about the plans before many in the British ranks. One of the much-suggested sources for this information was Gage’s wife, Margaret Kemble Gage.