Robert Gleed Explained

Robert Gleed, Sr.
Birth Date:c. 1836
Birth Place:Virginia, U.S.
Death Place:Harris County, Texas, U.S.
Occupation:Politician, merchant
Party:Republican
Resting Place:Sandfield Cemetery
Termend:1875
Termstart:1870
Office:Senator

Robert Gleed Sr. (c. 1836 – July 24, 1916), was an American politician, merchant, and civic leader. He served as a Republican in the Mississippi State Senate during the Reconstruction era.[1]

Biography

Robert Gleed Sr. was born in about 1836 into slavery in Virginia. He had remained enslaved until the end of the American Civil War, around 1865; and he was arrested as a runaway slave in Columbus, Lowndes County, Mississippi in 1863.[2]

Gleed was elected to Mississippi state legislature in either 1869, or 1870. In 1871, he testified for Congressional Investigators about the role of Southern newspapers, and the Ku Klux Klan in fomenting violence and resistance to Reconstruction-era efforts in Mississippi in the years after the American Civil War.[3]

He resigned from the state senate in 1873 after violent white mobs lynched seven "recalcitrant blacks". He had four children.[4] After several of his fellow African Americans were killed before an election in 1875, he relocated to Paris, Texas. He later returned to Columbus, Mississippi, but fled again after white mobs threatened him.

He campaigned for sheriff in Lowndes County in 1875.[5] He met with leading Democratic Party representatives and attempted to appease them before the election.[6] He was unsuccessful, and his home was attacked and burned as well as some of his neighbors' homes.[7]

He died on July 24, 1916, in Harris County, Texas. Gleed is buried at Sandfield Cemetery in Columbus, Mississippi.[1] [8] [9] [1]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Sandfield Cemetery . 2023-02-17 . The Columbus-Lowndes Convention and Visitors Bureau . en-US.
  2. Web site: Harrison . Heather . Eighth of May Celebration Recalls Slavery After Emancipation in Columbus . May 16, 2023 . Mississippi Free Press . May 21, 2023.
  3. Web site: Green . Hilary N. . Curbing Freedom (Klan violence): Robert Gleed . Department of Gender and Race Studies, University of Alabama.
  4. Baldwin . DeeDee . Robert Gleed . 2021-03-20 . Against All Odds: The First Black Legislators in Mississippi . 2022 . Mississippi State University Libraries . en-US . 10.17605/OSF.IO/GAX6F.
  5. Web site: Lewan . Todd . Breed . Allen G. . Taking Away the Vote — and a Black Man's Land . The Authentic Voice.
  6. Web site: REPORT OF THE SELECT COMMITTEE TO REQUIRE INTO THE MISSISSIPPI ELECTION OF 1875, WITH THE TESTIMONY AND DOCUMENTARY EVIDENCE. June 26, 1876. Google Books.
  7. Book: Fellman, Michael. In the Name of God and Country: Reconsidering Terrorism in American History. June 26, 2010. Yale University Press. 978-0300155013. Google Books.
  8. Web site: Sandfield – MS Civil Rights Project.
  9. Web site: HBO documentary to feature area African-American history event. The Commercial Dispatch. 8 May 2019.