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E D Gleason

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Preceded by
  
Lizzie P. Thompson

Political party
  
Democratic Party

Nationality
  
American


Resting place
  
Minden Cemetery

Succeeded by
  
Mary Smith Gleason

Name
  
E. Gleason

E. D. Gleason

Born
  
September 9, 1899 Shongaloo, Webster Parish, Louisiana (
1899-09-09
)

Died
  
July 25, 1959(1959-07-25) (aged 59) Minden, Webster Parish

Ernest Dewey Gleason, known as E. D. Gleason (September 9, 1899 – July 25, 1959), was a Democratic member of the Louisiana House of Representatives from the Evergreen Community north of Minden in Webster Parish in northwestern Louisiana. Gleason served from 1952 until his death at the end of his second term. He was briefly succeeded in office by his widow, Mary Smith Gleason, who was appointed for the remaining eight months by then Governor Earl Kemp Long.

Contents

Background

Gleason was born in Shongaloo in central Webster Parish to William Thomas Gleason (February 18, 1868 – September 14, 1947), a planter and banker, and the former Ida Camille Lunsford (November 7, 1867 – December 4, 1909), who is interred at Cotton Valley Cemetery in nearby Cotton Valley. His mother died when Gleason was about ten years of age. His father remarried. Gleason's stepmother was the former Annie Craton (April 15, 1877 – February 18, 1952), the aunt of the 38-year Webster Parish tax assessor, Richard B. Garrison (1916-1991), businessman William Banks Craton (1904-1989), and the Minden banker James Aubrey Craton (1908-1999).

Gleason graduated in 1918 from Cotton Valley High School north of Minden. The school closed in 2011. He worked in Caddo Parish from 1919 to 1935, when he began to manage his own farm at Evergreen. He was subsequently named vice president of the Webster Parish Farm Bureau.

Gleason ran unsuccessfully in 1944 for the Webster Parish Police Jury, having been defeated, 348 to 318, by the incumbent J. L. Munn, who held this seat from 1936 to 1952. After the police jury candidacy, the Gleasons lost one of their three sons, Thomas D. Gleason (August 7, 1924 – November 17, 1944), to hostile action in the United States Army Air Corps during World War II.

Political career

In 1947, Gleason joined Minden accountant Larkin L. Greer (1902–1991) and attorney Floyd D. Culbertson, Jr., who had been the mayor of Minden from 1940–1942, as co-chairmen of the Webster Parish "Kennon Club" to support Robert F. Kennon for governor of Louisiana. Kennon, also a former mayor of Minden, however, was eliminated in the Democratic primary. Former Governor Earl Long defeated another former governor, Sam Houston Jones, to return to office in 1948.

Gleason was elected to succeed interim Representative Lizzie P. Thompson of Doyline, who also had been appointed by Governor Long when her husband, Representative C.W. Thompson, died in office in 1951. In his successful legislative race, Gleason ran newspaper advertising on the theme "Better Highways". As a lawmaker, Gleason worked alongside the Bossier-Webster state senators, John J. Doles, Sr., a banker from Plain Dealing, and Herman "Wimpy" Jones, a businessman from Bossier City and Minden. As representative, Gleason worked for an extra judgeship for the 26th Judicial District, the construction of a new National Guard armory on Constable Street in Minden (since relocated), expansion of the Cotton Valley oil field, and several highway projects.

In 1956, Gleason won another legislative term by defeating in a runoff election Paul M. Campbell, an osteopathic physician who resigned from the Minden City Council to make the race and carried the backing of returning Governor Earl Long. Gleason polled 4,236 votes to Campbell's 3,998. In 1971, Dr. Campbell paid a $5,000 appeal bond after he was convicted of performing an abortion, a practice then illegal in Louisiana. The 21-year-old woman who had the abortion went thereafter to the former Confederate Memorial Medical Center in Shreveport for follow-up after complications developed; she alleged that another Minden doctor, unnamed, had referred her to Campbell. Monty M. Wyche, judge of the 26th Judicial District, sentenced Campbell to three years imprisonment. In the earlier primary contest for the House seat, two other candidates, B. C. Eeds of Cullen and the Minden barber Homer D. Acklen (1907–1981), were eliminated from the competition. In the campaign, Gleason voiced support for right-to-work legislation, which he said would strengthen organized labor by requiring the highest standards to recruit workers into union ranks.

Early in the 1956 legislative session, Gleason criticized Governor Earl Long for having employed "the most dictatorial methods I've ever seen" to promote the Long agenda with the lawmakers. Gleason joined in the formation of the "Country-Boy Bloc" to oppose many of the governor's programs. In 1958, Gleason introduced a bill for a new one-cent state sales tax earmarked for teacher salaries. Governor Earl Long voiced opposition to the tax, but Gleason said that he believed Long would reverse himself if sufficient public support for the tax increase developed among the electorate. He favored segregation, as did most Louisiana lawmakers at the time of the civil rights movement. Gleason supported a bill to make liability insurance compulsory. Gleason supported right-to-work legislation, his view having been that workers should not be forced into union membership. He also favored old-age pensions and expanded farm-to-market roads.

The race to succeed Gleason

Gleason filed for a third term in 1959 but died of a heart attack in the Minden Sanitarium three months later. Services were held at the Evergreen Baptist Church. Interment was at Minden Cemetery. In addition to his wife, he was survived by two other sons, William Ernest "Cotton" Gleason, Sr. (1919-1980), an educator who taught at Minden High School, relocated to Plaquemine, and later returned to Evergreen, where he is interred at Evergreen Cemetery, and Charles E. Gleason of Shreveport; a brother, Raleigh Rogerson Gleason (1903-1964), a bank vice-president from Minden, and a sister, Gladys G. McGritinsey of Shreveport. Another brother was William Charles Gleason (1890-1957) of Baton Rouge.

Mrs. Gleason did not contest the seat in the primary held in December 1959. Instead, son William Gleason filed for the position. He ran moderately well in the Democratic primary but finished in fourth place, thirty-one votes behind Minden businessman Frank B. Treat, Jr. (1923–1994), the third-place candidate. The coveted runoff berths went to Parey P. Branton, a former president of the Webster Parish School Board from Shongaloo, and the Minden attorney, Henry Grady Hobbs (1923-2012), a Sarepta native later long active on the Webster Parish Library Board. Hobbs led Branton in the primary, 1,634-1,504, but in the runoff, Branton, a Shongaloo businessman, prevailed by 16 ballots: 4,300 votes (50.01 percent) to 4,284 (49.99 percent). Branton carried only two of the five wards in the parish to take the seat. Branton was then elected without Republican opposition in the April 19, 1960, general election and held the seat until 1972, though Hobbs ran unsuccessfully for the position again in 1967 against Branton.

Cotton Gleason case

Thereafter, William E. "Cotton" Gleason was arrested in 1961 for having given barbiturates known as "Yellow Jackets" to at least two female students at Minden High School. On February 2, 1962, he received a $1,000 fine and a two-year sentence, both suspended. Four months later he was pardoned by Governor Jimmie Davis. After his arrest, Gleason resigned from Minden High School. He then hired Shreveport attorney Whitfield Jack, brother of his late father's House colleague, Wellborn Jack, to procure reinstatement, having claimed that his resignation was under emotional duress. However, Gleason was not reemployed by the Webster Parish School Board.

References

E. D. Gleason Wikipedia