{{Short description|American politician (1829–1902)}} {{for|the American politician and minister|William Henry Gleason (New York politician)}} {{More citations needed|date=September 2022}} {{Infobox officeholder |name=William Henry Gleason |image=William Henry Gleason.jpg |office=Lieutenant Governor of Florida |order=2nd |term_start=July 7, 1868 |term_end= December 14, 1868 |governor= Harrison Reed |predecessor= William W. J. Kelly |successor= E. C. Weeks |office2=Member of the<br/>Florida House of Representatives<br/>from Dade County |term_start2=1871 |term_end2=1875 |predecessor2=Isaiah Hall |successor2=William Watkin Hicks |birth_date= June 28, 1829 |birth_place= Richford, New York, U.S. |death_date= November 8, 1902 (aged 73) |death_place= Eau Gallie, Florida, U.S. |party= Republican |profession= Lawyer, real estate developer |spouse= Sara Griffin (m. 1858; born August 15, 1838 - died December 13, 1912) |children=William Henry Hunt Gleason (1862–1949)<br>Captain George Griffin Gleason (1865–1918)<ref>{{Cite news | first=Rick | last=Neale | title=Flu | url=https://www.floridatoday.com/story/news/2020/08/13/1918-spanish-flu-shuttered-schools-killed-young-and-old-alike-across-brevard-county/3191226001/| newspaper=Florida Today | location=Melbourne, Florida| page= 12A | date=August 15, 2020 | access-date=November 7, 2020}}</ref> |footnotes= }}

'''William Henry Gleason''' (June 28, 1829 – November 8, 1902)<ref>{{Cite web|url = http://www.jupiter.fl.us/documentcenter/view/2022|title = W. H. Gleason|website = Town of Jupiter [Florida]}}</ref> was an American politician from Florida. He was Florida's second lieutenant governor, and he was very briefly acting governor.

==Early life== William Henry Gleason was born in 1829 in Richford, New York. He had an early interest in engineering, banking, law and politics. In 1855, he opened a bank and began to develop the town of Eau Claire, Wisconsin. In 1858, he married Sara Griffin from New York. Gleason learned from his banking experience and moved into sales during the Civil War.<ref>Cresse, Lewis. ''A Study of William Henry Gleason: Carpetbagger, Politician, Land Developer''. 1979 PhD Thesis, Univ. of S. Carolina.</ref>

==Florida== The issue of slavery concerned Gleason, and he was appointed a special agent of the Freeman's Bureau in 1865. His mission was to scout the Florida peninsula as a possible site for a Negro colony.<ref>*[http://web.uflib.ufl.edu/spec/pkyonge/Gleason.htm Gleason Family papers]</ref> The idea of colonization did not appeal to Gleason. His recommendation against a Negro colony in Florida garnered local political support in future years.<ref>Cresse, pp. 1-11.</ref>

Having toured the state for several months, Gleason was one of the early post-war visitors to realize the great potential for business. He rented a schooner and moved his family to the old military post, Fort Dallas, in 1866 (near present-day Miami).

This time featured great transition in Florida. Gleason sought investment land under control of the state's Trustee's of the Internal Improvement Fund and proposed to ditch and drain land in exchange for bargain rates on nearby real estate. The board originated in Congress with the 1850 Internal Improvement Act that granted certain swamp and overflow lands to the states. Florida received millions of acres, and not all was swamp.

The mission of the Trustees of the Internal Improvement Trust Fund was to work with private companies to improve the state. Developers like Gleason were allowed to purchase {{convert|640|acre}} of state land for $40 in consideration for every {{convert|50000|cuft|m3}} of ditching completed. This amounted to just over six cents per acre and provided an 800% return on investment if the land could be resold at fifty cents per acre.<ref>Cresse 1979, pp. 62-63.</ref>

In 1875, Gleason became interested in a canal project to connect Indian River with Lake Washington. He proposed to rechannel and deepen Eau Gallie's Elbow Creek and extend the waterway to Lake Washington. The state's payment for this work was set at $4000 plus {{convert|4000|acre}} for every mile (10&nbsp;km² per km) of canal constructed. This project never materialized, however a drainage canal was cut (the Hopkins ditch) along this route, named after its promoter George W. Hopkins (1844-1925) who had purchased over {{convert|10000|acre|km2}}.

===George W. Hopkins=== While commencing the lumber business in Florida, Hopkins completed a drainage canal in 1909, now called ''Hopkins Canal'', along present day Aurora Road between Lake Washington and the Eau Gallie River. The general idea and location of a navigable canal near the ''Hopkins Canal'' was first proposed by Gleason in 1871. After passage of the Drainage District Act in 1913, Hopkins organized a huge drainage project. Hopkins founded Deer Park, Florida, with his daughter Agnes's husband, William H. Kempfer. The Kempfer Cattle Company still exists in Deer Park. Hopkins also founded the eponymous town of Hopkins, Florida.<ref>Eriksen, John M. ''Brevard County, Florida: A Short History to 1955''.</ref>

===Politics=== During the late 1860s and 1870s, Gleason traveled between his Fort Dallas residence and Tallahassee, seeking business and political connections. As a consequence of this and a few powerful Republican friends, on July 7, 1868,<ref>{{Citation | year = 1869 | title = Cases Argued and Adjudged in the Supreme Court of Florida | volume = 12 | last1 = Galbraith | first1 = John B. | last2 = Meek | first2 = A. R. | publication-place = Tallahassee | publisher = Edw. M. Cheney | page = 194 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=S3kDAAAAQAAJ&q=seventh+july&pg=PA194 | access-date = 2008-05-25}}</ref> he was sworn in as the state's second lieutenant governor. During an attempted impeachment of Governor Harrison Reed, Gleason claimed the governorship. The Florida Senate had adjourned on November 7, 1868, without deciding whether or not to impeach Reed. Reed's supporters, including the state's Adjutant General and the county sheriff, kept him out of the capitol. Gleason set himself up in a hotel and signed documents as governor. The Florida Supreme Court sided with Governor Reed, and the political struggle ended with Gleason's removal from the Lieutenant Governor position December 14, 1868.<ref>Morris, Allen and Joan Perry Morris, compilers. ''The Florida Handbook 2007-2008'' 31st Biennial Edition. pg. 312. [http://www.PeninsularPublishing.com Peninsula Publishing]. Tallahassee. 2007; {{ISBN|978-0-9765846-1-2}} Softcover {{ISBN|978-0-9765846-2-9}} Hardcover</ref>

Traveling along Florida's coast, Gleason passed many charming harbors. He liked one such area so much that he purchased most of it ({{convert|16000|acre}}) at $1.25 an acre and renamed it Eau Gallie, having been formerly called Arlington by its founder John Caroll Houston IV.{{clarify|date=September 2022}}{{citation needed|date=September 2022}}

Gleason prepared a plat of his new land, which encompassed the entire area from Indian River Lagoon to Lake Washington, approximately thirty square miles. William Lee Apthorp's 1877 Standard Map of Florida shows Eau Gallie in large capital letters, incorrectly designating Gleason's land as the county seat of Brevard County. Part of Gleason's land eventually became the city of Eau Gallie and later north Melbourne.<ref>Eriksen, pp. 58-61.</ref>

During the contentious 1876 presidential election, Gleason reportedly held up the certification of Florida's results. Shortly after the election, it was determined that there was a tie in Florida but also that the returns from Dade County had not been counted. After several attempts by the governor to obtain Dade County's returns, locals realized that Gleason had possession of them but had forgotten to mail them before going on a hunting expedition. The twenty-eight votes determined who Florida's electoral votes went for, though the final decision was ultimately made by a bipartisan commission who considered the returns from Florida, Louisiana, and South Carolina.<ref>{{Cite book|title=John Sewell's Memoirs and History of Miami|last=Sewell|first=John|publisher=Franklin Press|year=1933|location=Miami|pages=160–161}}</ref>

===Post Civil War=== In 1871, Gleason proposed the idea of the state's first Agricultural College to be located in the Eau Gallie section of Melbourne, Florida. Gleason offered a {{convert|2320|acre|adj=on}} donation of intermittent swamp lands east of Lake Washington to the Trustees of the Florida Agricultural College if they would select Eau Gallie as the school's campus. Records indicate that Gleason later received $100 from the state for two Eau Gallie lots to be used as sites for college building. The site was approved and the two-story coquina building was completed in 1875, but it was never used for its intended purpose. Remnants of the old campus are located off of present day Pineapple Avenue (formerly part of U.S. 1), north of Eau Gallie Boulevard. The college reemerged in the north Florida town of Lake City under Democratic leadership during 1884.{{citation needed|date=September 2022}}

Sensing legal difficulties in Dade County, Gleason moved his wife and two teenage sons to the unused campus of Eau Gallie's Agricultural College during 1882 and 1883 and began a sawmill and boat-building business. The Gleasons' took control of the old college building and lived there until they became established. By 1884, Henry and Sara Gleason had recorded the village of Eau Gallie and began selling allotments.{{citation needed|date=September 2022}}

The Florida State Agricultural College filed to foreclose on Gleason's claim to the vacant college building. After several years of litigation, the trustees of the college negotiated a settlement. Gleason's "donated" west Eau Gallie land was returned to him, and in exchange, the governor agreed to pay $2,000 for the small college building and campus.{{dubious|date=January 2019}}

Gleason and his sons converted the building into the prosperous Hotel Granada during the 1890s. It served the typical tourists of the day, sportsmen seeking fish and game. The two-story coquina hotel was destroyed by fire in 1902. The charred building symbolized the end of an era which coincided with the death of the lieutenant governor the same year.<ref>Eriksen 2003, pp. 74-75.</ref>

==Family== Gleason's younger son, Captain George Griffin Gleason, died in 1918 from pneumonia contracted when he had Spanish flu. <ref>{{Cite news | first=Rick | last=Neale | title=Flu | url=https://www.floridatoday.com/story/news/2020/08/13/1918-spanish-flu-shuttered-schools-killed-young-and-old-alike-across-brevard-county/3191226001/| newspaper=Florida Today | location=Melbourne, Florida| page= 13A | date=August 15, 2020 | access-date=November 7, 2020}}</ref> Captain G.G. Gleason's nephew William Lansing Gleason (son of William Henry Hunt Gleason) co-founded Indian Harbour Beach, Florida on June 6, 1955.{{citation needed|date=September 2022}}

==Footnotes== {{Reflist|33em}}

==External references== <!--if used to change the above please include as IN-LINE footnotes.---> *[http://web.uflib.ufl.edu/spec/pkyonge/Gleason.htm Gleason Family papers] *[https://web.archive.org/web/20020803051436/http://www.brevardpropertyappraiser.com/ Brevard County Property Appraiser] *Melbourne Bicentennial Book. July 4, 1976. Noreda B. McKemy and Elaine Murray Stone; Library of Congress 76-020298 *[http://www.beach-realty.com/ihb.html Indian Harbour Beach Homepage] *Morris, Allen and Joan Perry Morris, compilers. ''The Florida Handbook 2007-2008'' 31st Biennial Edition. Page 312. [http://www.PeninsularPublishing.com Peninsula Publishing]. Tallahassee. 2007; {{ISBN|978-0-9765846-1-2}} Softcover {{ISBN|978-0-9765846-2-9}} Hardcover. *[http://politicalgraveyard.com/bio/glassbrook-glenmore.html Political Graveyard - Death Information] * {{find a Grave|62088321}}

{{s-start}} {{s-off}} {{succession box|title= Lieutenant Governor of Florida|before=William W. J. Kelly|after=E. C. Weeks|years=1868–1869}} {{succession box|title=Member of the<br/>Florida House of Representatives<br/>from Dade County|before=Isaiah Hall|after=William Watkin Hicks|years=1871–1875}} {{s-end}}

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{{DEFAULTSORT:Gleason, William Henry}} Category:1829 births Category:1902 deaths Category:Eau Gallie, Florida Category:Lieutenant governors of Florida Category:Republican Party members of the Florida House of Representatives Category:People from Melbourne, Florida Category:Founders of populated places in Wisconsin Category:People from Richford, New York Category:19th-century members of the Florida Legislature Category:Bankers from Wisconsin