Gary married Lavinia W. Corrie in 1856. They had ten children, including E. Stanley, Mrs. Robert C. Taylor, Mrs. Henry Pratt Janes, Mrs. Harold Randolph, Mrs. Eugene Levering Jr., Mrs. Francis E. Pegram, Mrs. Van Lear Black and Mrs. Andrew H. Whitridge. Only eight of his children survived to adulthood. Gary was a prominent member of Baltimore's prestigious
Brown Memorial Presbyterian Church and led the movement to establish Babcock Memorial Church there in memory of Brown Memorial's minister,
Maltbie Babcock. He also contributed to the construction of a church in Daniels, MD, which was later named in his honor: Gary Memorial United Methodist Church. Gary had a home in the Mount Vernon section of Baltimore, and a 61-acre summer place in
Catonsville, Maryland known as the "
Summit", the later added in 1979 to the
National Register of Historic Places, noted for its fine architecture and beauty. Gary died on October 31, 1920, at his home at Linden Avenue and Dolphin Street in Baltimore. ==References==