Charles Sumner Gleed Collection
Finding Aid
Collection 34
Introduction
Charles Sumner Gleed (1856-1920) was a Topeka Businessman involved
in railroad, telephone, mining, land, banking and other businesses in
Kansas and throughout the nation. He was also a lawyer, a newspaperman,
and a member of the University of Kansas Board of Regents. He was active
in the Republican Party and in various civic and cultural affairs. His
collection, which consists of 55 boxes of correspondence, financial
and other business records, speeches and articles, clippings and other
items, reflects the diversity of his interests. The bulk of the materials
date from 1880 to his death in 1920, although there are scattered items
from 1872 to 1928.
The collection was donated to the Kansas State Historical Society
in 1932 as part of his wife’s estate. In 1973 Gleed’s daughter,
Grace Gleed Merriam, added more items. There are no restrictions on
the use of the materials. The proper citation for the collection is
Charles Sumner Gleed Collection, Manuscripts Department, Kansas State
Historical Society.
Biography
Charles Gleed was born in Morrisville, Vermont, in 1856. His father
died when he was five and, in 1866, Gleed, his mother, Cornelia, and
his brother, James Willis moved to Lawrence, Kansas where they had relatives.
Charles Gleed attended Lawrence public schools and, for a time the University
of Kansas. While a student he worked at a variety of jobs, including
serving as an assistant to the Chancellor and writing for newspapers.
He also studied law and passed the Kansas Bar in 1884. Moving to Topeka,
Gleed joined the legal department of the Santa Fe Railroad and later
worked in their advertising division. When the company reorganized in
the 1890’s, he became one of its most active directors. He also
formed a law partnership with his brother and Eugene Ware and continued
his newspaper work. In 1896 he, B. P. Cheney, Jr. and Hal Gaylord purchased
the Kansas City Journal and Gleed was actively involved with the paper
until his death. He was an official of the Missouri and Kansas Telephone
Company and other telephone organizations in a variety of enterprises
involving lands, mines, manufacturing, and banking.
Gleed was an ardent Republican and was active in party affairs at
both the state and national level. In 1889 he was considered for the
position of District Attorney in Topeka, and in 1891 for the U. S. Senate
seat left vacant at the death of Preston Plumb. Gleed also had a number
of civic and cultural interests. He served on the University of Kansas
Board of Regents and on the Board of Directors of the Kansas State Historical
Society. In addition, he belonged to various clubs and served on state
and local committees. He was a frequent speaker at political and social
gatherings and had numerous articles published in various newspapers
and magazines. Throughout his life he continued to display an interest
in history, music and literature and considered himself a poet.
After his marriage to Mabel Gore in 1888, Gleed established his home
at 104 Greenwood in the Potwin district of Topeka. The couple had three
daughters. Gleed died in 1920 after a short illness.
Scope and Content
The Gleed collection is a rich resource for studying a wide range
of topics. However the diversity of Gleed’s interests and their
overlapping nature create difficulties in using his materials. These
are compounded by the fact that Gleed kept several sets of records simultaneously,
often containing similar materials. There is no single comprehensive
organizational system in his papers and the researcher must be prepared
to find material on any one subject to be scattered through the collection.
Thus references in the finding aid are meant to suggest useful items,
but cannot be presumed to be all inclusive.
Although some of Gleed’s correspondence files focus on one subject,
many of Gleed’s closest associates were engaged in a variety of
projects. For example, B. P. Cheney, Jr., a wealthy eastern investor,
was involved in the Kansas City Journal, Santa Fe Railroad, and the
London and Arizona Copper Company. When he went bankrupt in 1918, Gleed
helped him dispose of his private railroad car. Ralph Twichell was a
New Mexico lawyer who defended the Santa Fe in workman’s compensation
cases. He corresponded with Gleed about legal questions, land deals,
and Twichell’s book and lectures on New Mexico history. Edgar
Parks also invested in several of Gleed’s projects and seemed
to have been a good friend.
Gleed was a loyal Kansan and there is abundant material on the state
in his collection, but his interests and his papers are not limited
to Kansas affairs. His newspaper and telephone businesses were headquartered
in Kansas City, Missouri, where he spent much time and where he was
involved in civic affairs. He was also deeply interested in the southwest,
both in its history and scenery and in its material resources. The majority
of the businesses represented in the collection were in Kansas, Missouri,
Colorado, Oklahoma, Texas, Arizona, and New Mexico. In addition, Gleed
retained both family and business ties with Vermont and the rest of
New England, and he traveled frequently to St. Louis, Chicago, and New
York to visit friends and conduct business deals.
Because Charles Gleed was involved in a number of companies, his papers
provide abundant information on business history. In addition to correspondence
with other investors and officials about the affairs of various companies,
Gleed accumulated a number of business records including financial and
annual reports, lists of stockholders, organizational charts, and accounts
of daily activities. Individuals sent Gleed information about projects
in which they hoped he would invest. Thus his papers include brochures,
prospectuses and other data for companies to which he was not committed.
The bulk of the business materials date from 1900 to 1920 when Gleed
was keeping letterpress volumes and indexed correspondence files. Somewhat
more limited information about companies with which he was connected
in earlier years may be found in his mounted clippings.
Gleed’s involvement with the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe
Railroad is reflected in the abundant materials for the company in his
collection. Starting in the 1880’s in the legal and advertising
branches of the Santa Fe, Gleed became a key figure when the company
reorganized in the 1890’s and remained on the board of directors
until his death. He corresponded with company executives about policy
and with employees about passes, luggage, and special treatment for
important friends. He wrote articles for Santa Fe publications, spoke
at Santa Fe gatherings, and kept numerous clippings about the railroad
documenting the changes it underwent in the 1890’s. In addition
Gleed hoped to write a history of the company.
His collection contains a proposed table of contents and bibliography
for this project, along with notes and drafts of chapters. In addition,
Gleed had obtained and kept a few Santa Fe records from 1883 including
financial and organizational documents, correspondence, and hand-drawn
maps of proposed routes across Missouri.
Gleed was also involved in other railroad affairs, serving on the
boards of various railroad companies and manufacturers of railroad equipment.
He also belonged to railroad associations and frequently spoke and wrote
for railroad groups. His collection contains financial data, correspondence
and maps for numerous lines, as well as descriptions and pictures of
such railroad products as brakes and lights.
The telephone industry was another of Gleed’s major concerns
although somewhat less related material is contained in the collection.
After 1905, he served as president of the Missouri and Kansas Telephone
Company and the Bell Telephone Company of Missouri as well as being
involved in telephone projects in Texas and Oklahoma. When the Southwestern
Bell System was formed in 1912, he became president of the Board of
Directors of the four companies involved. The indexed folders of Gleed’s
collection contain correspondence for numerous executives of telephone
and related firms including those of Western Union and American Telephone
and Telegraph. Also present are letters from telephone company employees
and former employees, from workmen to fellow executives who resigned
at the time of company reorganization. Additional correspondence and
information about M. K. & T. organization and salaries may be found
in the dated correspondence. Gleed’s business records also contain
items relating to a “History of the Telephone” pamphlet
and to a trip he and other executives took in 1914.
Gleed was also deeply interested in a number of mining projects which
are described in his correspondence files. United Zinc and Chemical
Company was one of the enterprises he supported. Along with B. P. Cheney,
Jr., Charles Finney and Walter Swart, he promoted the London and Arizona
Copper Company. He also corresponded with promoters and investors about
oil fields in Kansas and Missouri and mica mines in New Mexico. While
the actual level of Gleed’s commitment to some of these projects
is unclear, his indexed correspondence includes brochures describing
companies, maps and production figures.
Correspondence relating to various land investments are also present
in the Gleed collection. These include individual indexed folders kept
by individuals or companies and a general file labeled “Real Estate,
Offers of” (Folder #268) which contains a variety of items. Gleed
frequently received letters and flyers about land for sale in Kansas
and in other states. Some of these included irrigation projects designed
to provide water and sometimes power in arid areas. The collection includes
illustrated brochures and blueprints of irrigation projects near Tucson,
Arizona, in the Pecos River Valley of west Texas and in the Arkansas
River Valley of Kansas and Colorado.
Gleed was also involved with the San Diego Land and Town Company which
promoted land sales, citrus growing and irrigation in California. Gleed’s
business records include a bound volume of records of the company from
its founding in 1881 to 1895. Included are such items as organizational
and financial data and minutes of directors and shareholders meetings
held in Boston and Topeka.
In part, Gleed’s interest in land investments grew out of his
involvement with the mortgage business. He served as an official of
both the Farmer’s Loan and Trust Company and the Pioneer Trust
Company and his collection includes correspondence with a number of
bank and loan executives. Also present is data about the history of
farm mortgage rates in Kansas, financial information about various institutions
in which he invested or considered investing, and announcements of directors’
meetings. Gleed kept specific files on individual banks and financial
institutions as well as general files containing offers of bonds, stocks,
and other investments (see folders #104 and #211).
Technological developments also interested Gleed, and he promoted
the development and sale of various new products and processes. One
of his favorites was the ore-refining process invented by Lucian Blake
of the University of Kansas. Gleed’s attempts to support the Blake
Mining and Milling Company can be found in a letterpress volume for
1900-1910 and in the indexed correspondence. Gleed and Edgar Parks were
part of a group seeking to market and promote the use of Blaugas for
heating and lighting and later corresponded about the use of electricity.
He also supported the production and sale of the Baldwin Standing Thresher.
Numerous individuals also wrote Gleed seeking to convince him to invest
in their inventions. As a result his indexed correspondence contains
a variety of blueprints, pictures and information about such products
as folding file cabinets and refillable toothbrushes (see folder #104).
In addition, records from the Pierson Manufacturing Company, which produced
telegraph transmitter, are included in Gleed’s business records
although his contact with the company was slight.
In addition to his other business enterprises, Gleed was a newspaper
man. He had begun his journalistic career while a student in Lawrence,
writing for local papers and occasionally publishing his stories in
Chicago and New York papers. He also wrote promotional literature for
the advertising department of the Santa Fe and for a brief period in
1884 edited a small Denver newspaper. Many of his articles from these
years are included in his mounted clippings and others are among his
drafts and typescripts. In 1896 Gleed, B. P. Cheney, Jr., and Hal Gaylord
purchased the Kansas City Journal. Gleed maintained an active involvement
with the Journal until his death, and his collection contains abundant
materials about its history. Gleed’s business records contain
several folders of Journal materials. Early items describe the purchase
and initial organization of the newspaper under Gleed and Gaylord and
the construction of the Journal building in 1902. Later folders trace
the attempts to sell the newspaper.
Scattered throughout are records of bond ownership and other financial
records. Similar materials relating to the Journal, are located in Gleed’s
indexed correspondence (See folder #61). Gleed also corresponded with
a variety of individuals about Journal affairs. Some files, such as
the one containing items of William Craig, the editor, discuss daily
operation of the newspapers; others contain letters from employees and
ex-employees voicing grievances or asking for help. In addition, because
Gleed strove to make the newspaper an important political force, his
correspondence is full of letters about the content and editorial stance
of the paper. Many of theses are from politicians, thanking him for
his support or complaining about their coverage. Other items in the
Gleed collection which relate to journalism include his correspondence
with newspaper men around the country and drafts of articles he wrote.
The Gleed Collection also contains some materials relating to the
legal profession although these are less plentiful than the business
and journalism items. Gleed himself had originally studied to be a lawyer
at Columbia and taught law at K. U. Together with Eugene Ware, they
formed the law partnership. Gleed also engaged in legal work for the
Santa Fe. Some of his mounted clippings, speeches and articles reflect
his early legal activities. Gleed did not actively pursue a legal career
in his later life but he did continue to correspond with lawyers and
expressed himself on legal topics. Clay Hamilton, a Topeka lawyer, handled
Gleed’s own legal affairs, and their correspondence may be found
in the indexed correspondence. (Other items in the business records
include Hamilton’s correspondence with family and with Pierson
Co. but not with Gleed).
Gleed had been active in politics as a young man in Lawrence writing
political articles and gaining popularity as a political speaker. Typescripts
and drafts of some of his speeches and articles are included in the
collection. Accounts of others appear in mounted clippings. Throughout
his life he also corresponded with politicians and his papers should
be checked for leading Republicans of the period. While the indexed
files simplify this process for the period after 1911, rich materials
may be found in the dated and mounted correspondence, and the mounted
clipping files which reveal Gleed’s early political aspirations
and contain confidential letters from John J. Ingalls. In his political
statements, as in his other speeches and articles, Gleed maintained
a consistently conservative pro-business position on most issues. He
frequently attacked Populists and Socialists and protested against the
actions of labor unions. However, his letters and speeches indicate
he did favor prohibition and woman suffrage and complained about the
racist attitudes of white Southerners.
As a member of the Board of Regents and as an alumnus, Gleed was actively
involved in the affairs of the University of Kansas figuring prominently
in several of its controversies.
The clipping file contains his defense of James Canfield against accusations
of teaching doctrines which were overly liberal for the university.
The dated and mounted correspondence contains letters which Gleed clearly
intended to be kept private, about the 1890 fight over the chancellorship.
Throughout his later life, Gleed corresponded with K. U. administrators
and professors. Many of these items which may be found in the indexed
correspondence relate both to personal and to university matters. Gleed
also remained active in his college fraternity, the Phi Kappa Phis,
corresponding with other alumni and playing a vigorous role in plans
for a new chapter house at K. U.
As Gleed describes in an autobiographical essay, he had come to Lawrence
when the town was still a young settlement. Throughout his life he retained
an interest in the town’s early history, collecting clippings
and about speeches and articles on topics such as Quantrill’s
raid. He was active in both the Kansas State Historical Society and
in the Missouri Valley Historical Association.
Throughout his life he maintained close ties with friends he had made
as a young man in Lawrence, making his correspondence a resource for
ex-Lawrence residents who later left the state.
Throughout his life, Gleed exhibited a strong sense of loyalty to
his relatives and to his home state of Vermont. His family papers contain
his attempts to trace his family tree and his correspondence with relatives
over their ancestors. His indexed correspondence is full of letters
to and from cousins whom he helped to get an education and a job. With
other relatives he conducted business dealings. As the mounted clippings
and correspondence show, Gleed maintained property in Vermont and visited
there as well as corresponded regularly with Vermont relatives. Gleed’s
relations with his immediate family is somewhat less well documented
in the collection. Scattered letters to his wife and daughters reveal
little of their life.
There is considerable material about Charles Gleed’s brother
James Willis Gleed. Mounted clippings document Willis’s early
activities as a writer and as a law professor. Some of his speeches
and articles are included in the collection as well as correspondence
between the brothers. In later life, Willis Gleed became a prominent
attorney for the Frisco Railroad and Bell Telephone System.
Gleed also maintained a number of cultural interests. His mounted
clippings include accounts of lectures and concerts he attended, as
well as programs and calling cards which he saved. Also present in the
collection are speeches on literary topics he gave as a young man and
poems which he and his friends wrote. Although in his later life he
had little time for cultural pursuits, he continued to exchange poems
and essays and to mount clippings which he liked. He also supported
cultural events in Topeka and Kansas City and was interested in a range
of different organizations. Items relating to some of them may be found
in his general file of Associations (#274) and Clubs (#288).
In addition, Mabel Gore Gleed was an accomplished musician and the
Gleed collection contains a number of her musical items. Concert programs
from Lawrence, Topeka and a bound volume of notes taken on musical subjects,
presumably date from her years as a music student at the University
of Kansas and a speech she gave tells of her experiences there. In addition
programs of concerts given in Lawrence, Topeka and Kansas City include
her as a performer. Other programs and mounted clippings from New York,
Boston, and Chicago describe performances of major artists.
Another interest of Gleed’s was philanthropy, and associations
to which he contributed are included in his indexed correspondence files,
some of them grouped together as “Associations” (see folders
#244, #274, #265). Much of Gleed’s philanthropy was conducted
on an individual basis, however, Gleed helped numerous ex-employees,
widows and orphans and needy young students. He also assisted many young
men and women in finding jobs, either directly in his own companies
or in the companies of his friends. Their stories are included in the
files he kept of job seekers and in individual indexed files.
Information on a variety of other topics is present in the Gleed collection.
A number of items relate to World War I including his own war related
activities in Kansas, and letters from young men and women he knew who
were serving in France and elsewhere and correspondence with fellow
investors over arms sales. Gleed also claimed to have given Frederick
Funston his start toward fame and maintained great admiration for him.
The collection contains correspondence with and about Funston, a speech
Gleed gave at his death and letters relating to Gleed’s attempt
to collect money for his widow.
The Gleed collection also contains maps and photographs. Other manuscript
collections in the Kansas State Historical Society which include Gleed
materials are the Eugene F. Ware Collection and Frederick Funston Collection.
There are additional materials on Gleed in the KSHS Library, including
a dissertation on Gleed by Terry Harmon.
Series Notes
Indexed Correspondence
From 1911 until his death Gleed kept much of his correspondence in
numerical files, in which individuals, companies, and subjects were
assigned numbers. The collection expanded gradually until it contained
1281 items in 1920. An alphabetical card catalog kept by Gleed provides
the major access to this material. Since there is no cross referencing,
it is necessary to check under all possible individuals or companies.
The few numbered subject files were labeled with titles such as Invitations
(#108), Insurance (#91), Applications for Employment (#248) and Bills
and Receipts (#265). None of these can be assumed to be complete, but
they do contain some useful items.
The indexed files vary greatly in significance. Some are major, containing
numerous items and dealing with important topics. Others seem relatively
minor consisting of accounts to whom Gleed loaned money or of bills
from his tailor in New York or for service at the hotel at Grand Canyon.
In addition there are numerous financial reports and prospectuses, many
for companies with whom Gleed was only tangentially involved.
Items in each folder seem to have been numbered in blue pencil by
Gleed or by his secretary, D. V. Morris. Notes about content or about
money to be sent are also sometimes present. Within each file, items
were kept approximately in reverse chronological order. Some early folders
have been rearranged to bring them into strict chronological order,
but later ones retain their original arrangement. Some numbers are missing.
Dated Correspondence
In addition to the indexed correspondence, the Gleed collection contains
three boxes of correspondence dating from 1881 to 1928. These items
apparently were put in chronological order at the time the collection
was originally processed. Files from 1881 to 1899 contain a range of
items including significant letters to and from correspondents later
included in the indexed files. From 1899 to 1901, most of the items
are carbon copies of letters sent by Gleed. After 1902, a variety of
items relating to business affairs, the University of Kansas, and friendships
are included. From 1911 to 1920, the items in the dated correspondence
resemble those in the indexed files, often being from the same correspondents.
There is also a group of letters received and sent after Gleed’s
death in 1920. These include letters of condolence and correspondence
about a memorial volume which Gleed’s wife and brother hoped to
assemble. A scattering of undated items, including some from individuals
in the indexed files, complete the section.
Letterpress Volumes
Gleed also kept a series of letterpress volumes. The early volumes
contain specific groups of letters; one containing letters to John McCook,
and another containing correspondence with Lucian Blake, Walter Swart,
and others involved in the Blake Mining and Milling Company. Gleed also
kept a series of chronological letterpress volumes and by 1905 these
each contain an index to the correspondents included. After 1911 these
overlap with the indexed correspondence.
Mounted Letters
Gleed mounted most of his early correspondence and tied it into bundles.
One group of these he titled “Sundry Letters.” Although
the majority of these items date from 1888 to 1892, there are scattered
items from as early as 1882. Significant letters about political matters
and K. U. affairs appear in this group as well as letters from friends
and relatives. A later group of mounted letters covers the years 1891
to 1985 and deals with Sen. Plumb’s death, Republican politics,
the Santa Fe reorganization, and Gleed’s articles for national
magazines.
Other mounted groups of letters concern family matter. There is a
group of school mementos of Mabel Gore Gleed and a few letters she received
before her marriage. “Wedding Letters” and letters received
at the birth of the Gleed’s first child express congratulations
to the couple. Many of these items are from the same correspondents
as are found in the mounted and dated correspondence. A few contain
business information.
Business Records
In addition to the company records which occur in the numbered correspondence,
the Gleed collection contains two boxes of materials from specific businesses.
There are papers of the Santa Fe Railroad for 1883, both the originals
and typescript copies. Items include financial records, correspondence,
and surveys of routes. A bound volume contains records of the San Diego
Land and Town Company for 1881 through 1895, including the company charter
lists of directors, and minutes of shareholders meetings held in both
Boston, Massachusetts, and Topeka, Kansas. There are also oaths for
officials, financial and annual reports, and clippings. Items relating
to Gleed’s activities in the telephone business include a typescript
history of the Missouri & Kansas Telephone Company, letters Gleed
received from associates acknowledging receipt of a pamphlet entitled
“History of the Telephone” and a booklet of photographs
and clippings of a trip which Gleed and other executives took in 1914.
Kansas City Journal materials include a set of records dating from
1899-1908 and dealing with the initial organization of the newspaper
by Gleed and Hal Gaylord. Deeds, financial records, checks, balance
sheets, information about office duties and floor plans are all present.
Some records of bond ownership appear throughout these records, and
others are grouped together in a separate folder. Additional materials
deal with property in central Missouri and in Kansas City which Gleed
considered buying and with the Farmers Loan and Trust Company of which
Gleed was a director.
Correspondence of Clay Hamilton, Gleed’s lawyer, is also present
in the collection. Most of the letters dating from 1914 to 1916 are
from Clay Hamilton to brother, Chad, who was his law partner and a State
Senator, and to his father John, who was Treasurer of Elk County. None
of the correspondence seems to relate directly to Gleed. Another set
of correspondence concerns the Piersen Company, also known as the Piersen
Telegraph Transmitter Company. In letters dating from 1913 to 1915,
Gleed declined to invest in the company. Later correspondence dating
from 1917-1921 is chiefly between representatives of the Piersen Company
and Clay Hamilton who was their lawyer.
Railroad History
Gleed was interested in railroad history and collected materials which
he planned to use in writing about the history of the Santa Fe railroad.
These include a series of typescripts dealing with land grants and with
the Atlantic and Pacific Railroad. There are also notes for an article
on railroads and for a book on the Santa Fe Railroad. The table of contents
and the bibliography for the proposed company history are present. In
addition, there are mounted clippings about railroads, a typescript
on “Railway matters,” and a copy of “The Story of
the Santa Fe” by Glenn Bradley which includes a lengthy unpublished
chapter.
Speeches and Articles
Gleed kept typescripts of his major speeches and articles as well
as published versions of some of them. He apparently made lists of these
and attempted to organize them, but many items remain unidentified.
Some of these appear to be commencement, after-dinner, or retirement
speeches. Others seem to be drafts of articles for newspapers. Gleed
also wrote poems which are included in the collection. In addition there
are notes for a play or movie script and for a history of the “Old
and New Club” of Lawrence. His folder of “Names and Addresses”
contains miscellaneous references to friends and business associates.
Family and General Items
Gleed’s papers also contain materials about himself and members
of his family, including a brief autobiography which he wrote for his
daughter in 1904. In addition there are biographical articles about
Gleed which appeared during his lifetime and at his death. Other materials
contain genealogical items relating to both the Gleeds and the Gores,
as well as legal documents, clippings, correspondence with cousins over
ancestry and a narrative biography of Ebenezer Gore (apparently a great
uncle of Mabel). Gleed also preserved a few childhood items of his daughters.
In addition, this series contains typescripts of speeches by Mabel
Gore Gleed and James Willis Gleed and manuscript and typed versions
of poems which Elizabeth Spring wrote in 1880 and 1881. Authorship is
unclear on various other poems and essays which Gleed kept and which
are similar to items in the mounted and unmounted clipping files.
Mounted Clippings
From the time he was a young man in Lawrence, Gleed assembled and
mounted clippings about himself, his relatives and a wide variety of
subjects that interested him. Many of these he tied together and labeled.
In most cases, however, arrangement is only approximate and titles do
not accurately reflect the contents. Although difficult to use, the
mounted clippings provide information not available elsewhere in the
collection, especially about his activities before 1900. They also include
an assortment of calling cards, dinner programs, musical materials,
and a book of lecture notes by Mabel Gleed in 1885.
Unmounted Clippings
A number of clippings which Gleed preserved were never sorted or mounted.
Most—but not all of these—date from 1900. These have been
maintained together along with a scrapbook of undated and largely unidentified
clippings.
Charles Sumner Gleed Collection Box List
Collection 34
Box 1 Indexed Correspondence #1 -
#6
Box 2 Indexed Correspondence #7 -
#26
Box 3 Indexed Correspondence #27
- #54
Box 4 Indexed Correspondence #55
- #69
Box 5 Indexed Correspondence #70
- #88
Box 6 Indexed Correspondence #89
- #99
Box 7 Indexed Correspondence #100
- #123
Box 8 Indexed Correspondence #124
- #140
Box 9 Indexed Correspondence #141
- #159
Box 10 Indexed Correspondence #160
- #200
Box 11 Indexed Correspondence #201
- #219
Box 12 Indexed Correspondence #220
- #261
Box 13 Indexed Correspondence #262
- #273<>
Box 14
Indexed Correspondence #274 - #300
Box 15
Indexed Correspondence #301 - #364
Box 16
Indexed Correspondence #365 - #420
Box 17
Indexed Correspondence #421 - #490
Box 18
Indexed Correspondence #491 - #565
Box 19
Indexed Correspondence #566 - #640
Box 20
Indexed Correspondence #641 - #714
Box 21
Indexed Correspondence #715 - #780
Box 22
Indexed Correspondence #781 - #842
Box 23
Indexed Correspondence #843 - #950
Box 24
Indexed Correspondence #951 - #1035
Box 25
Indexed Correspondence #1036 - #1160
Box 26
Indexed Correspondence #1161 - #1281
Box 27
Dated Correspondence, 1881 – 1901
Box 28
Dated Correspondence, 1902 – 1915
Box 29
Dated Correspondence, 1916 – 1928
Undated Correspondence
Box 30
Letterpress Volumes: April 3, 1893 – March 14, 1898
May 30, 1899 – October 13, 1902
December 6, 1900 – April 23, 1908,
February 28, 1910
Box 31
Letterpress Volumes: January 18, 1898 – February 10, 1898,
December 8, 1901
March 25, 1902 – January 17, 1905
February 18, 1905 – June 30, 1905
June 30, 1905 – December 1, 1905
Box 32
Letterpress Volumes: December 7, 1905 – April 17, 1906
April 19, 1906 – October 16, 1906
October 18, 1906 – April 25, 1907
Box 33
Letterpress Volumes: April 27, 1907 – November 8, 1907
November 12, 1907 – May 13, 1908
May 15, 1908 – January 5, 1909
Box 34
Letterpress Volumes: January 7, 1909 – July 2, 1909
July 2, 1909 – February 10, 1910
February 9, 1910 – July 25, 1910
Box 35
Letterpress Volumes: July 29, 1910 – March 1, 1911
March 1, 1911 – October 7, 1911
October 10, 1911 – May 24, 1912
Box 36
Letterpress Volumes: May 24, 1912 – February 25, 1913
February 25, 1913 – January 15, 1914
January 16, 1914 – January 22, 1915
Box 37
Letterpress Volumes: January 22, 1915 – February 4, 1916
February 3, 1916 – August 19, 1916
August 19, 1916 – May 3, 1917
Box 38
Letterpress Volumes: May 3, 1917 – February 27, 1918
February 4, 1918 – March 30, 1920
March 30, 1920 – April 19, 1920
Box 39
Mounted letters received
“Sundry Letters”, 1882 – 1888
General Letters, 1891 – 1895
Box 40
Mounted letters received and other materials
Mabel Gore, 1877 – 1887
“Wedding letters, Gleed and Gore, 1888”
“Cornelia Gleed, born Oct. 7, 1891”
Box 41
Business correspondence and records
Santa Fe Railroad, correspondence and records, 1883
San Diego Land and Town Company, records, 1881-1895,
bounded volume
“History of the Telephone” mounted letters received, 1911
“Missouri and Kansas Telephone Co., booklet of trip, 1914
Box 42
Business correspondence and records
Kansas City Journal, correspondence and records, 1897-1921
Missouri land purchase documents, 1896-1913
Farmers Loan and Trust Co. correspondence, 1915-1916
Clay Hamilton, correspondence, 1914-1916
Piersen Company correspondence, chiefly with Clay Hamilton,
1913, 1915, 1917-1922
Box 43
Railroad history materials
Typescripts by Gleed
Proposed Agreement between the Santa Fe and George
Washington Beach
Santa Fe Land Grant
Original Charter—Atlantic & Pacific Railroad Company
Authority for Atlantic & Pacific Mortgage
Forfeiture of Atlantic & Pacific Land Grant
Land Grant Aid
Early Financial and Traffic History of the Atlantic &
Pacific Railroad Company
Royal Gorge War
“Memoranda for use in writing an article on railroads”
“Notes for a book on the Santa Fe Railroad”
Dedication and table of contents for a book on the Santa
Fe Railroad
Bibliography on the Santa Fe Trail and the Santa Fe
Railroad
“Railway matters” typescript
Mounted clippings, railroads
The Story of the Santa Fe, by Glenn Bradley, typescript
Box 44
Speeches and articles
Lists of speeches and articles by Gleed
Typescripts of final versions (see attached list)
Published version of articles
Box 45
Speeches and articles
Early drafts of speeches and articles appearing in final version
in box 44
Box 46
Speeches and articles
Unidentified speeches and articles and drafts by Gleed
Poems by Gleed
Unidentified speeches, articles and poems
Notes for a play or movie
History of Old and New Club, Lawrence
Name and address file
Box 47
Papers
Autobiographical writings
Biographies and obituaries
Geneological notes for Gleeds and Gores
Ebenezer Gore narrative
Geneological letters received from relatives
Letters received from Gleed children
Family items
Mabel Gore Gleed, speech
James Willis Gleed, speeches and articles
Elizabette Spring, poems
Speeches, poems and clippings by others
Box 48
Mounted clippings
1877-1886
“1881” “1882”, “1883”, “1884”
“1885”
“1886”
“1887”
“1888”
“Mexico 1888”
“1889”
“Vermont”, 1886-1889
Box 49
Mounted clippings
“1890”
“1891”
“1892”
“1893”
1892-1893
1894-1895
Box 50
Mounted clippings
Small clippings book, 1876-1884
“J. W. Gleed”
Articles and speeches by and about J. W. Gleed, 1881-1891
Poems
“Legal Opinions and Literature”
“Social memoranda”
“Miscellaneous”
Box 51
Mounted clippings
“Kansas History and Literature”
“Kansas State University”
“Lawrence”
“Senator Plumb”
Senator John Ingalls
James Canfield
“Silver”
Box 52
Mounted clippings
“Musical”
“Programs”
“Music and Musicians”
“Music—M.G.”
Music lecture notes, bound volume
Box 53
Unmounted clippings
Box 54
Unmounted clippings
Scrapbook of general clippings
Speeches by Gleed For Which Typescripts Appear
in the Collection
1800 “The Kansas Memorial, Old Settler’s Celebration, 1879
1882 Coriolanus
1882 Falstaff in Love
1886 Our Country
1886 A Complex Political Condition
1888 Topeka to Mexico
1888 The Hillman Insurance Cases
1889 The Government of Cities
1890 Francis Huntington Snow
1891 Both Sides of Ingalls
1892 Political Letters
1893 As Others See Us
1893 The Great Railway Systems of the United States—The Atchison,
Topeka &
Santa Fe
1893 Kansas Populists Again
1893 The Political Situation in Kansas
1893 Solid Shots of Truth
1895 The Income Tax Law
1896 The Ancient Mines of Zacatecas
1896 The Money Question
1899 The St. Louis, Kansas City & Colorado Railroad
1899 Romance and Reality in a Single Life: Gen. Frederick Funston
1900 Trusts and Combines
1901 The Steel Trust and its Makers
1901 Prohibition in Kansas
1901 Our Friends, the Steam Railroads
1901 Kansas City, the Central City
1902 Captains of Industry: William Collins Whitney
1902 A Night View of the Grand Canyon of the Colorado
1903 Railway Companies and the Young Men’s Christian Association
1906 Labor Union Errors
1906 Facts and Comment on Railroad Agitation in Kansas
1912 Dedication of the Monument to the late James E. Hurley
1913 Colorado
1913 The Kansas of 1912
1913 George Thomas Nicholson
1913 On the Death of George Thomas Nicholson
1913 Get the Safety Habit
1913 Colonel John K. Rankin’s Story of the Quantrill Raid
1913 The Quantrill Raid
1914 Eugene Ware bust for KSHS
1914 The Mission of the New Employees Magazine—Southwestern Telephone
News
1914 Professor Carruth’s Resignation
1915 The Protection of Business is the Protection of Civilization
1915 The Human Element
General Hudson and the Trusts
Vermont
Votes for Women
Work
Subject Headings for the Charles Sumner Gleed Collection
Anthony, Daniel R., Jr.
Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad Company
Banks and Banking
Blake, Lucien
Canfield, James
Capper, Arthur
Carruth, William H.
Cheney, Ben
Connelly, William E.
Coolidge, Calvin
Curtis, Charles
Farmer’s Loan & Trust
Funston, Frederick
Gaylord, Hal
Gleed, James Willis
Gleed, Mabel Gore
Hamilton, Clay
Ingalls, John J.
Irrigation
Kansas City Journal
Kansas Newspapers – KC
Kansas State Historical Society
Little, Edward
Mines and Mining History
Missouri & Kansas Telephone Co. SW Bell Telephone Co.
Morris, D. V.
Parks, Edgar
Piersen Telegraph Transmission Company
Plumb, Preston
Railroads
Republican Party Kansas
Ripley, E. P.
San Diego Land & Town Company
Scott, Charles
Storey, W. S.
Strong, Frank
Taft, William Howard
Telephone
Templin, Olin
Thompson, William Howard
Topeka Railway Company
University of Kansas
Vail, Theodore
Ware, Eugene
White, William Allen
World War 1914-1918
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