Gleason was born in
Winston-Salem, North Carolina, to
Simon Green Atkins and Oliona Pegram Atkins. Both of her parents were educators; her mother was a teacher and her father was the founder and first president of Slater State College, now
Winston-Salem State University. After receiving her
bachelor's degree from the
University of Illinois in 1931, she took her first library job in Louisville, Kentucky, at
Louisville Municipal College (originally known as Louisville Municipal College for Negroes) where she soon became the head librarian, following in the footsteps of her sister, Olie Atkins Carpenter, who was a librarian at this institution, as well. In 1936, Gleason received her
master's from the
University of California, Berkeley and moved to Chicago where she received her Ph.D. in 1940 from the
University of Chicago. Her dissertation,
The Southern Negro and the Public Library: A Study of the Government and Administration of Public Library Service to Negroes in the South, was published in 1941 and was the first complete history of library access in the South, with a focus on African-American libraries. Her adviser was
Carleton B. Joeckel. == Career ==