<P> In February 1860, Gage began to have epileptic seizures . He lost his job, and (wrote Harlow) as the seizures increased in frequency and severity he "continued to work in various places (though he) could not do much". </P> <P> On May 18 Gage "left Santa Clara and went home to his mother . At 5 o'clock, A.M., on the 20th, he had a severe convulsion . The family physician was called in, and bled him . The convulsions were repeated frequently during the succeeding day and night," and he died in status epilepticus, in or near San Francisco, late on May 21, 1860 . He was buried in San Francisco's Lone Mountain Cemetery. ​ ​ </P> <P> In 1866, Harlow (who had "lost all trace of (Gage), and had well nigh abandoned all expectation of ever hearing from him again") somehow learned that Gage had died in California, and made contact with his family there . At Harlow's request the family had Gage's skull exhumed, then personally delivered it to Harlow, ​ ​ who was by then a prominent physician, businessman, and civic leader in Woburn, Massachusetts. ​ ​ </P> <P> About a year after the accident, Gage had given his tamping iron to Harvard Medical School's Warren Anatomical Museum, but he later reclaimed it ​ ​ and made what he called "my iron bar" his "constant companion during the remainder of his life"; it too was delivered by Gage's family to Harlow . (Though some accounts assert that Gage's iron had been buried with him, there is no evidence for this .) After studying them for a triumphal 1868 retrospective paper on Gage Harlow redeposited the iron‍--‌this time with the skull‍--‌in the Warren Museum, where they remain on display today . </P>

Who said it personality is located in the brain no brain no personality