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  1. 5 de oct. de 2009 · Reseña sobre Thomas Gage, El inglés americano: sus trabajos por mar y tierra o un nuevo reconocimiento de las Indias Occidentales, traducción de Stella Mastrángelo, introducción y notas de Eugenio Martín Torres, México, Fideicomiso Teixidor / Libros del Umbral, 2002.

  2. Thomas Gage Militar británico. Entre 1763 y 1773 asumió el mando de los ejércitos británicos en Norteamérica. Era gobernador de Massachusetts cuando se produjeron en Lexington, el 19 de abril de 1775, los primeros enfrentamientos que desembocaron en la guerra de Independencia de Estados Unidos.

  3. Thomas Gage (1719 – April 2, 1787) was a British general and commander in chief of the British North American forces from 1763 to 1775. His aggressive actions against the colonists contributed to the hostilities between the American colonies and the United Kingdom and serve as a direct cause of the American Revolutionary War .

  4. Thomas Gage, the British Commander-in-chief at the outset of the American War of Independence, has not inspired many biographies. Ably, he served in North America during the French and Indian War and stayed in the colonies after this conflict. He is best known for ordering British forces to Lexington and Concord and the costly British….

  5. 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 mission? (Runtime 2:41) This video was supported by a generous grant from Americana Corner and the American Battlefield Protection Program. For more information, visit Americana Corner.

  6. Gage, Thomas, aproximadamente 1603-1656. Nueva relación que contiene los viages de Tomas Gage en la Nueva España -- Crítica textual; América Central -- Descripciones y viajes; Etnología -- América Central; Indios -- Civilización; CDU: 913(728)"16" 39(728) Documento fuente: Cuadernos Hispanoamericanos. Núm. 218, febrero 1968

  7. 28 de sept. de 2020 · Thomas Gage, a Catholic priest who became a zealous ally of Oliver Cromwell, played a crucial role in the creation of what was to become Britain’s Caribbean empire. It did not appear so at the time, though, and he was not to realise it, for his unlikely encounters with the Lord Protector led to his own death and would deal a mortal blow to the Protectorate regime.