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Encyclopedia Dubuque

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GLEED. Ambrose: Difference between revisions

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Ancestry: https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/77334799/person/48521428023/facts?_phsrc=MOd29008&_phstart=successSource
Ancestry: https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/77334799/person/48521428023/facts?_phsrc=MOd29008&_phstart=successSource


GLEED, Ambrose (Gloucester, England, May 22, 1831--Menlo Park, CA, Apr, 29, 1896) Gleed came to the United States on September 28, 1849 and lived in Buffalo, New York through 1855 when he moved in Dubuque. (1)
[[Image:gleed.png|left|thumb|350px|Julien Dubuque]]LEED, Ambrose (Gloucester, England, May 22, 1831--Menlo Park, CA, Apr, 29, 1896) Gleed came to the United States on September 28, 1849 and lived in Buffalo, New York through 1855 when he moved in Dubuque. (1)


On May 14, 1873  according to the Quad-City Times a half dozen on his customers from the Quad Cities had their stocks of liquor they had bought from him seized or had been jailed. Gleed, a British subject, intended to file a suit in the United States States court on the ground that the State had no right to forbid what the general government licensed. (2)
On May 14, 1873  according to the Quad-City Times a half dozen on his customers from the Quad Cities had their stocks of liquor they had bought from him seized or had been jailed. Gleed, a British subject, intended to file a suit in the United States States court on the ground that the State had no right to forbid what the general government licensed. (2)

Revision as of 18:49, 4 June 2026

Ancestry: https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/77334799/person/48521428023/facts?_phsrc=MOd29008&_phstart=successSource

Julien Dubuque

LEED, Ambrose (Gloucester, England, May 22, 1831--Menlo Park, CA, Apr, 29, 1896) Gleed came to the United States on September 28, 1849 and lived in Buffalo, New York through 1855 when he moved in Dubuque. (1)

On May 14, 1873 according to the Quad-City Times a half dozen on his customers from the Quad Cities had their stocks of liquor they had bought from him seized or had been jailed. Gleed, a British subject, intended to file a suit in the United States States court on the ground that the State had no right to forbid what the general government licensed. (2)

On December 4, 1874 a fire at his brewery destroyed 5,000 bushels of barley. The loss was estimated at $30,000 and he carried $15,000 worth of insurance. (3)

In the inquest into his death in Redwood City where he was recuperating, a newspaper article stated that Gleed, a wealthy landowner in San Francisco, had died of heart failure. (4) His survivors included his two married daughters--Mrs. Fannie Halasberry of San Francisco and Mrs. Frank Haswell of Sacramento. (5)



Source:

1. Ancestry.com search

2. Ancestry.com "Ambrose Gleed"

3. Ibid.

4. Ibid.

5. Ibid.