at
Cornell University After briefly studying medicine at Ithaca under Austin Church, he began work for his uncles' forwarding firm, with a line of barges on the
Erie Canal, which he took over by 1837. In 1847, he was elected to the
New York State Assembly as a
Whig. In 1854, he purchased a tract of land at
Bell Ewart on
Lake Simcoe, 51 miles north of
Toronto, Ontario, Canada and was soon processing timber on a large scale. From that point, the Ontario, Simcoe and Huron Union Railroad carried the lumber to its wharves in Toronto, offering Sage a reduced rate for a specified number of carloads per month. The lumber was shipped across Lake Ontario to Sage's wholesale lumber yards at
Albany, New York. He did not own the timber lands on Lake Simcoe, but rather purchased logs from farmers eager to clear their lands. Moving to
Brooklyn in 1857, he became active in the Plymouth Congregational Church, where the Rev.
Henry Ward Beecher, son of
Lyman Beecher and brother of
Harriet Beecher Stowe, was pastor. He later endowed the Lyman Beecher Lectureship on Preaching at
Yale Divinity School. About this time he was also purchasing lumber in Michigan, as the Ontario supply began to wane. In 1863, he became a business partner with
John McGraw. The two founded the town of
Wenona, Michigan, named for the mother of
Hiawatha and now part of
Bay City, in 1864. The two earned a fortune in
lumber and land in
Wisconsin,
Michigan, and New York. In 1865, Sage purchased timber berths in Oakley township, Muskoka, necessary to keep the Bell Ewart mill running. The construction of a canal was required to run the logs from the Black River to Lake Couchiching. With previous experience on the
New York State Assembly and legislation involving improvements to the
Erie Canal, he attracted the interest of other Lake Simcoe lumbermen to form the Rama Timber Transport Company in 1868. The canal to divert the logs into Lake Couchiching opened in 1869, later that year Sage sold the Bell Ewart mill and associated timber berths to Messrs. Silliman and Beecher. Young Harry Beecher was a nephew of Sage's pastor, Rev.
Henry Ward Beecher. He funded construction of what is now the
Sage Library of the
Bay County Library System in Michigan in 1884. It was designed by Cornell architecture professor
Charles Babcock in the French
Château-style, and is today a historical landmark. == Involvement with Cornell ==