Background
A direct descendant of John Gage of Ipswich, Daniel Gage was born in Pelham, New Hampshire on June 4, 1828, to father Nathan Gage and mother Mehitable (Woodbury) Gage. As a descendant of the Gage family who went to England in 1066 with William the Conqueror at the time of the Norman Conquest, his great-great-great-great-grandfather, John Gage of Ipswich was the first of the Gage family to migrate to the New World as one of the first proprietors of Ipswich, Massachusetts in the summer of 1630.
Education
He spent the first 25 years of his life on the family-owned Gage Hill Farm and attended the local school.
Career
He moved his family to a southeast section of Dunstable, New Hampshire, now known as the Gage Hill section of Pelham, New Hampshire. In 1746, five years after the New Hampshire/Massachusetts boundary was settled, Thomas Gage, along with John Butler, Ephram Cummings and other citizens, successfully petitioned to establish Pelham, carved out of the towns of Dunstable and Londonderry, New Hampshire. The town was named for the first Duke of Newcastle, Thomas Pelham Holles.
The five sections of the new town were known as Center, Gumpas, North Pelham, Gage Hill, and Currier Highland.
Just like what the auto industry did to the buggy whip, the age of refrigeration came, and the harvesting of ice became a dead industry. The Gage family began to sell off their land, as well as donate tracts to municipalities, such as a 26-acre (11 ha) parcel to the city of Lowell for a park dedicated for the exclusive use of children, now known as Gage Field in the Centerville section of Lowell.
Daniel Gage owned the majority of ponds and lakes in the Greater Lowell area. In Chelmsford, Massachusetts, his company harvested ice from Hearts Pond.
By the late 1880s he was the largest taxpayer in Pelham, New Hampshire, because he owned all the land around the major lakes and ponds where he harvested the ice.
Between the two, they paid over $415/year ($1888 equivalent to $2016 ). He set up large ice houses along the south bank of the Merrimack River, above the Pawtucket Falls in the Pawtucketville section of Lowell.