Philip K. Gleed
Philip King Gleed (September 10, 1834 – June 29, 1897) was a Vermont attorney and politician who served as President of the Vermont State Senate.
Biography[]
Gleed was born in Granby, Quebec, Canada on September 10, 1834, the son of Reverend John and Elizabeth (Prettyjohn) Gleed, formerly of England.[1] He was raised in Morrisville, Vermont, and attended People's Academy in Morrisville, Bakersfield Academy in Bakersfield, and Troy Conference Academy in Poultney, from which he graduated in 1855.[1] He taught school while attending Union College, from which he graduated in 1859.[2] He then studied law with his brother Thomas, attained admission to the bar, and practiced in Morrisville.[1] Gleed rose to prominence as a lawyer, practicing with H. Henry Powers and attaining election as President of the Vermont Bar Association in 1888. Gleed was also involved in banking and other businesses, including serving on the board of directors of banks in Morrsiville and Hyde Park.[3]
Gleed served in the American Civil War, attaining the rank of Captain in the 4th Vermont Militia Regiment, which protected the Vermont-Canada border following the St. Albans Raid.[4]
A Republican, Gleed served in several local and county offices, including school board member, village trustee for Morrisville, Selectman for Morristown, Vermont, State's Attorney for Lamoille County from 1863 to 1868, Member of the Vermont House of Representatives from 1867 to 1868, and a federal assessor of internal revenue from 1870 to 1874.[1][5]
Gleed was State's Attorney again from 1880 to 1882.[1] In 1880 he was also elected to the Vermont Senate, serving one two-year term and leading the Senate as its President Pro Tempore. From 1890 to 1892 Gleed served as Vermont's Commissioner of Taxes.[6][7]
Philip K. Gleed died in Morrisville on June 29, 1897.[8] He was buried in Morrisville's Pleasant View Cemetery.
Family[]
Gleed married his first wife, Ellen Jane Fuller (1833–1883) of Moira, New York in 1861.[1] They had two children, both of whom died before adulthood.[1] In 1885 he married a Morrisville widow, Laura Kenney Fleetwood.[1] Laura Fleetwood was the mother of Frederick G. Fleetwood, who studied law under Gleed's tutelage.[9]
References[]
- ^ a b c d e f g h William Hartley Jeffrey, Successful Vermonters: A Modern Gazetteer of Lamoille, Franklin and Grand Isle Counties, Vermont, 1907, pages 50 to 51
- ^ Vermont Secretary of State, Joint Rules, Rules and Orders of the Vermont Senate and House of Representatives, 1878, page 122
- ^ Hiram Carleton, editor, Genealogical and Family History of the State of Vermont, 1903, page 704
- ^ Union University, Union College Alumni in the Civil War, 1861-1865, 1915, page 49
- ^ United States Senate, Journal of the Executive Proceedings of the Senate of the United States Senate, Volume 17, 1901, page 841
- ^ Anna L. Mower, History of Morristown, Vermont, 1935, page 163
- ^ Andrew Van Vranken Raymond, Union University: Its History, Influence, Characteristics, and Equipment, Volume 3, 1907, page 162
- ^ Carleton, page 704
- ^ Vermont Bar Association, Report of Proceedings of the Annual Meeting, 1933, Volume 33, page 178
- 1834 births
- 1897 deaths
- People from Granby, Quebec
- People from Morristown, Vermont
- Union College (New York) alumni
- Vermont lawyers
- State's attorneys in Vermont
- Vermont Republicans
- Members of the Vermont House of Representatives
- Vermont state senators
- Presidents pro tempore of the Vermont Senate
- Burials in Vermont
- 19th-century American politicians
- 19th-century American lawyers