Lafayette Blanchard Gleason

Lafayette Blanchard Gleason (May 30, 1863 - October 24, 1937) was the secretary of the Republican State Committee of New York from 1906 to 1937, and he was also the General Secretary for seven Republican National Conventions.[1]

Lafayette Blanchard Gleason with his wife and J. Jaeckel circa 1912

Publications

  • A treatise on the law of inheritance taxation, 1917-1922
gollark: If people kill me it plays loud ender dragon noises, and interestingly enough continues to play them even when I'm not actually alive.
gollark: The speaker is mostly just for my death contingency.
gollark: Otherwise it would be nice to have something to stop me flying stupidly fast at walls.
gollark: It's irritating that there's not room in my neural interface for a block scanner.
gollark: My thing just tries to slow you down all the time if you're going downward fast. Which mostly works with hover boots.

References

  1. "Secretary of the Republican State Committee 31 Years Stricken Here at 74". New York Times. October 25, 1937. Retrieved 2008-12-08. Lafayette Blanchard Gleason, secretary of the Republican State Committee since 1906 and nationally known in Republican circles as general secretary of the last seven Republican national conventions, died yesterday at 9:40 A. M. at St. Luke's Hospital.
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