BIOGRAPHY: Maj. James Harrison GAGEBY, Cambria County, PA
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From Wiley, Samuel T., ed. Biographical and Portrait Cyclopedia of Cambria
County, Pennsylvania. Philadelphia: Union Publishing Co., 1896, p. 185-7
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MAJOR JAMES HARRISON GAGEBY, deceased, was born within the corporate limits of
the city of Johnstown, September 5, 1835, and died in the same city, July 13,
1896. He was a son of Robert B. and Rebecca (Scott) Gageby.
Major Gageby was of Scotch-Irish stock, and his military genius came to him
through a long line of honorable ancestry, easily traceable to the Conqueror,
William of Normandy. His grandfather, James Gageby, emigrated from the North of
Ireland to the United States in 1774, and located in the city of Philadelphia,
and was present in Independence Hall when the Declaration of Independence was
read. No doubt this document had the effect to convince him of the righteousness
of the American cause, for he entered the patriot army and fought with them in
the cause of liberty throughout the entire struggle. After the war was over and
independence had been acknowledge, he removed to Westmoreland county, where he
died in 1836, at the advanced age of eighty-six years.
Robert Gageby (father) was born in Westmoreland county and was reared in
that county, and in 1834, during the building of the Pennsylvania canal and
Portage railroad, he came to Johnstown, dying in 1880, at the age of seventy-
four years. Robert Gageby was a staunch republican, and always took an active
and intelligent part in all affairs pertaining to the party. He was a man
possessing in an eminent degree many sterling qualities of head and heart. Major
Gageby's mother was a native of Somerset county, of Scotch extraction, and a
descendant of the Scott and Stewart families, so famed in the history of
Scotland.
In his early days, Major Gageby worked with his father in the blacksmith
shop of Gageby & Kinley. His elementary education was obtained in the common
schools of Johnstown, to which, when about eighteen years of age, was added an
academical course in Elder's Ridge academy, under the direction of Dr.
Donaldson. In 1857, following a spirit of adventure, he went to Iowa, and there
for three years engaged in various occupations. He returned home, and entered
the military service, April 19, 1861, as a sergeant in company K., Third
Pennsylvania volunteers, for the three months' service. The company was known as
the Johnstown Zouaves, and as such was thoroughly drilled in infantry tactics.
In this regiment he served in General Patterson's column in Maryland and
Virginia, and was engaged in the battle of Falling Water, Virginia, July 2,
1961, and was discharged July 30, 1861. He assisted to recruit a company for the
Seventy-sixth Pennsylvania volunteers, with a view of becoming a commissioned
officer in that regiment, but prior to the organization of it, enlisted October
25, 1861, in the Nineteenth regiment of United States infantry, and was
appointed first sergeant, to date from enlistment. He was on duty in Greensburg,
Pennsylvania, several weeks drilling a detachment of his regiment, and at the
headquarters of the regiment in Indianapolis, Indiana, was engaged as drill-
sergeant, until the organization of companies G and H, of the first battery of
this regiment, when he went into the field in the Army of the Potomac, as first
sergeant of company G., and served with it at Harrison's landing. His regiment
acted as guard for General McClelland from there, and was in the campaign
through Maryland, took part in the battles of Antietam, South Mountain, and
subsequently at the battle of Fredericksburg, at which time it was attached to
the Seventeenth infantry, and was actively engaged during all that battle. In
March, 1863, company G was transferred to the army of the Cumberland, and joined
to the first battalion, Nineteenth infantry. At Murfreesboro, Tennessee, June 1,
1863, he was appointed a second lieutenant, and assigned to company A,
Nineteenth infantry; served with it until the battle of Hoover's Gap, Tennessee,
when he was placed in command of company G of the same regiment, led it in the
charge of the regular brigade against a division of the confederate forces, and
was brevetted first lieutenant for gallant and meritorious service in action
upon this occasion. He was returned to company A, First battalion, Nineteenth
infantry, just prior to the battle of Chickamauga, in which battle he was
wounded on September 20, 1863, and made a prisoner of war, and was taken to
Libby prison, Richmond, Virginia. While there, the famous tunnel was being
constructed to provide for the escape of prisoners, and Captain E. I. Smith,
Lieutenant M.C. Causten and Major Gageby were told by Colonel Rose, chief of the
tunnel party, to consider themselves as belonging to his party, and while they
were not permitted work in the tunnel, on account of the prejudice of some of
the volunteer officers, they were charged with preventing, the discovery of the
tunnel while it was being constructed.
Major Gageby escaped through this tunnel February 9, 1864, but was re-
captured February 11 near Charles City X Roads, Virginia, and returned to the
prison, and placed in the middle dungeon during eight days, when he was removed
to Danville, Virginia, thence to Charlotte, North Carolina, Macon, Georgia,
Charleston, South Carolina, where he was for several days under the fire of the
Federal artillery: Columbia, South Carolina; thence again back to Charlotte,
North Carolina, and later to Raleigh, Goldsboro, and Wilmington where he was
released on parole, March 1, 1863, after an imprisonment of seventeen months and
ten days. He then returned to duty as first lieutenant of the Nineteenth
infantry, on Lookout Mountain, Tennessee, in May, 1865. He was on duty with his
regiment in Arkansas and the Cherokee Nation in 1865 and 1866. He was brevetted
captain September 20, 1863. He was ordered on recruiting service in September,
1866, until March, 1868; was appointed a captain in the Thirty-seventh infantry,
and passed his examination for that office in Louisville, Kentucky, then joined
the Thirty-seventh infantry at Fort Stanton, New Mexico, in March, 1868, and was
engaged in several unimportant scouts and expeditions against the Mescalero
Apaches, and in October, 1868, was ordered with his company to join the Canadian
River expedition under Col. A. W. Evans at Fort Bascom. This expedition was
against the Comanches, and they were out four months, a greater part of the
time without tents, until they found the Comanche village on the Salt Fork of
the Red river, Texas, December 25, 1868. Here they were actively engaged with
Indians from 10 o'clock, A.M., until sundown of that day.
In April and May, of 1869, he was with General J. R. Brooke, on his
expedition against the Mescalero and the Sierra Diablo Apache Indians. His
company had a brief engagement with them near the big Canon of the Guadaloupe
mountains, New Mexico. On August 11, 1869, he was assigned to the Third infantry
and with his company (D) served on duty in 1870, guarding the Kansas Pacific
railway in Colorado, where he had several slight skirmishes with Arapahoe and
Cheyenne Indians; was removed to Fort Lyon, Colorado, and Camp Supply, Indian
Territory, and in 1874 was ordered on reconstruction duty in the South, and
remained there until August, 1877, when he was ordered north during the railroad
riots in Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Indiana. In September 1877, he was ordered to
Fort Missoula, Montana, where he served until again ordered on recruiting duty
in 1878. He rejoined the Third infantry from recruiting service in May, 1881;
served with it until April, 1883. In February, 1889, he came to Johnstown on
leave of absence, and was there at the time of the great flood, in which he lost
several members of his family and all his home property. He was placed on duty
there by order of the Honorable Secretary of War, and performed duty with the
Pennsylvania National Guard until September, 1889, when he was detailed on
special recruiting duty for one year, and subsequently selected by Colonel
Mason, of the Third infantry, for the regular detail and was on that duty until
promoted to major of the Twelfth infantry, July 4, 1892. He was then put in
command of Fort Sully, South Dakota, where he remained two years, when he was
transferred to Fort Niobrara, Nebraska, and at the time of his death stood
within two files of a lieutenant-colonelcy, which it was his ambition to reach.
In 1873 Major Gageby was happily married to Matilda, a daughter of Jacob
Fend, of Johnstown, and to their union was born one child, Emma Fend, who was
born at Fort Missoula, Montana, and is now being educated at Ogontz' near
Philadelphia.
The above military record, sketched somewhat in detail, is one of which any
man might justly feel proud. Courageous in action, firm in the discharge of
duty, he was yet one of the most generous, affable, and companionable of men,
and his friends in the army were, perhaps, more numerous than those of any other
man of his rank. He had the faculty of remembering names and faces to a great
degree, and was scarcely ever at fault in recognizing and calling by name any
person he had ever met. Constantly forming new acquaintances, he never forgot
his old friends, and grasped them to himself as with hoops of steel, and
although by reason of his occupation, separated for the greater portion of his
life from the scenes of his childhood, it is doubtful whether there was at the
time of his death a man in the community more universally known and more
sincerely like than Major Gageby.