(on the left) which Gage commanded during the
Siege of French-held Malta. Born the third son of General
Thomas Gage and
Margaret Kemble, Gage joined the
Royal Navy in November 1789. He was appointed to the
third-rate HMS Bellona at
Portsmouth and, having been promoted to
midshipman, transferred to the third-rate
HMS Captain in September 1790. He went on to serve in the third-rate
HMS Colossus, the
sixth-rate HMS Proserpine, the third-rate
HMS America, the third-rate
HMS Egmont and then the
second-rate HMS Princess Royal. Gage transferred to the
fifth-rate HMS Minerve in January 1796, and having been promoted to
lieutenant on 11 March 1796, he took part in the capture of the Spanish ship
Santa Sabina in December 1796. He also took part in the
Battle of Cape St Vincent in February 1797 and led the
Minerve's boats' crews in company with those of the frigate in the cutting out of the
French ship Mutine at
Santa Cruz, Tenerife in May 1797. He was promoted to
commander on 13 June 1797 and to
captain and commanding officer of the fifth-rate
HMS Terpsichore on 26 July 1797, the day after her previous captain
Richard Bowen and first lieutenant
George Thorp were killed during the
assault on Santa Cruz, Tenerife. HMS
Terpsichore then sailed for
Tunis as part of a squadron ordered to take possession of some French vessels following a breach of neutrality committed by its
Bey, following which the squadron cruised the
Balearic Islands where they made several captures before HMS
Terpsichore joined the squadron conducting the
Siege of French-held Malta. In HMS
Terpsichore he also conveyed
Charles Emmanuel, who had just abdicated as
Prince of Piedmont, to exile in
Sardinia in February 1799 and captured the Spanish ship
San Antonio in June 1799. In July 1800 he was involved in an incident in which his squadron stopped and searched a Danish convoy heading for France: the incident led to the formation of the
Second League of Armed Neutrality, an alliance between
Denmark–Norway,
Prussia,
Sweden and
Russia. Gage became commanding officer of the fifth-rate
HMS Uranie in the
Channel Squadron in March 1801 and took part in the capture of the French ship
Chevrette in July 1801. He went on to be commanding officer of the fifth-rate
HMS Thetis in the Mediterranean Squadron in July 1805 and of the third-rate
HMS Indus also in the Mediterranean Squadron in February 1813. In HMS
Indus he saw action at the attack on the
French ship Romulus in February 1814 during the closing stages of the
Napoleonic Wars. ==Senior command==