Our mission is to provide a platform to collect, communicate, document and preserve the history, heritage, and genealogical information associated with the Gleaves surname, any variants of the spelling, as well as others related by birth or marriage.
While we assist in research on all the various lines, our emphasis is on the descendants of Matthew Gleaves, who immigrated to America from Cambridgeshire, England in the mid Eighteenth Century.
Pierre Babasin reached us using the Contact page to tell us about a family letter that he owned and then gave us permission to add it to our Letters Section. Click here for this letter. He also told us about using the Goodspeed History of Cheatham County to research his family and provided its link which you can find under the Links Section.
Pierre, thank you for sharing this with us.
If you have a family document that you would like to share with us and have preserved on this web site, let us know by using the Contact page.
The dates have been set so reserve this time on your calendars.
Wed, Oct 10 through Sat. Oct 13, 2012
in the Nashville area of Mount Juliet/Lebanon (Wilson County) where many of the Gleaves lived. Facilities are still being reviewed.
The planning for the reunion has begun with the appointment of George Wilkerson as the association vice president.
As stated in the duties of the vice president, George will:
Within the next few months, George will:
Once the details have been finalized, they will be posted here and an email sent to the emailing list.
If you have suggestions for the reunion, please use the Contact page and we will get them to George.
For several years, Gleaves family members have been caring for this half acre cemetery located in the Burning Tree Apartment complex in Nashville, TN. The cemetery is surrounded by a fence with a small gate opening. During storms this past spring, many large trees fell damaging the fence. This fence needs to be repaired and the gate replaced by a wider one to allow larger equipment access to keep the cemetery mowed. The cost for these repairs is estimated to be about $250. To support these family members who provide the physical labor with your financial contribution towards these repairs and continued upkeep of this cemetery as well as other Gleaves cemeteries (Absalom, Michael and Gleaves-Clements), click here for the Contact page. Let us know of your willingness to contribute any amount and detailed instructions will be emailed to you. Thanks in advance for your support.


As you can see, the cemetery had become overgrown.

Through various family contacts, including the Director of Metro Beautification and the Court Ordered Community Service program, the Sheriff’s Crew for mowing and clearing of cemeteries was enlisted to help get the cemetery cleaned up. Prior to their arrival, Owen Gleaves cut the downed trees into manageable sizes that could be carried off. On Wednesday morning, August 17, Metro Public Works trucks arrived with equipment and a crew of about 25 people including 5 supervisors to clear and clean the cemetery. The workers were serving their court ordered community service sentences. From the after pictures, you can see that they worked hard and did a good job. See the gallery for all of the pictures of the cemetery cleaning.
Arrangements have been made to add this cemetery to the regular rounds of the Sheriff’s Crew and it will be cleaned three times a year. In September they will return and rake the entire cemetery.

Here are links to Content added recently with the date added:
12/5/2011 Writings of Laura Keene Gleaves, the wife of Dr. Charles Wythe Gleaves and the great-grandmother of the webmaster: her magazines, journals and Biblical poems.
10/28/2011 Rufus Turner letter
8/11/2011 The final installments for the Gleaves in the 1850-1930 Census Records
Matthew Gleaves, Sr; Matthew Gleaves (son of William); & Sarah Gleaves Allen & her descendants.
8/07/2011 James Turk Gleaves & his descendants in the 1850-1930 Census Records
8/07/2011 Nancy Gleaves in the 1850-1930 Census Records
8/04/2011 Esther Gleaves Finley & her descendants in the 1850-1930 Census Records
7/29/2011 Margaret Gleaves Turk & her descendants in the 1850-1930 Census Records
7/14/2011 All documents loaned to us by the Dunkley family have been scanned and loaded to the web site in the Letters and Diaries section of the Family History. New additions include:
James Turk Gleaves'
memo book from 1819,
his ledger beginning in 1836
and his ledger beginning in 1854.
James Turk Gleaves, Jr's record book of the Union Debating Society of Floyd Institute beginning in 1850. Some of the questions they considered were:
Ought capital punishment to be abolished?
Who serves the most, a warrior or a statesman?
Have the Indians received more or less from the whites than the Negroes?
It is probable that the Union will be dissolved in fifty years.
S. C. ought to secede from the Union.
There is more pleasure derived from the pursuit of an object than from the procession of it.
The account book for the Wythe Minute Men kept by Robert Harvey Gleaves beginning in 1860.
The ledgers and order book kept by James Taylor Gleaves from 1909 to 1945 after he inherited the family farm from his father, Robert Harvey Gleaves.
4/1/2011 Ramsey Family in Census and discussion of names
6/12/2011 New military cemeterie
Several Gleaves cousins are having a spirited debate on this subject. Do read what they have been saying, clcik here.
New document categories have been added in the Family History Section. During the Blunt Gleaves Reunion, family members shared documents that they had collected with us and those have been added to this section. If you have documents you would like to include on the web site, use the Contact page to let us know about them.
Sam Gleaves and His MusicSam Gleaves is a talented, young member of our Gleaves Family. To learn more about him and his music, click here.
Gleaves Family members at the reunion.
The reunion was a great success and besides that, it was a lot of fun. To read & see more about the reunion, click here.
To see pictures, click here
Gleaves Family Association in PicturesWhile you are waiting for us to get the new site up and running properly. click on the title above and watch a history of the Gleaves Family Association in pictures.
At our 2005 Reunion in Nashville, Tennessee, it was suggested that we develop a web site for our Gleaves Family Association. We had no idea at that time what a success this venture would turn out to be.
We have added family history books written by our members, included cemetery information about Gleaves burial locations, and added historical letters written by and for our Gleaves ancestors. We have posted information about past reunions as well as information for future reunions.
Most of all, the site has allowed us to reach out and find unknown (to us) family members. We have heard from people all over the world. Cousins have contacted us wanting to know how they fit into this family.
As a result of all of this activity, we outgrew our old site. We had reached the limit on the number of cemeteries we could add. Navigating the letters was awkward, cumbersome and time consuming. Our repository for pictures incurred an annual fee. We only had search capability for our letters. In other words, we were bursting at the seams.
After much discussion with our web site server provider and research on other possibilites for the site, we have decided to continue with our same server provider and use their current, state-of-the-art software to maintain the site. All of the content from the existing site is currently being moved to this site using the new software.
Please browse through the site and look at the changes:
There is a cost involved in setting up this new site which you will be able to see in the financial statement. We currently have the money to cover this expense, but it will use up most of our treasury. You might like to become a member of the $100 club or renew your membership (see the 2009 business meeting minutes for more information).
As always we want to hear from you. You can use the Contact page to reach us. Tell us what you think of the new site/design; what would you like to see added/changed; would you like to contribute to the content of the site or even to the cost. In other words, whatever is on your mind.
Enjoy this Labor of Love!