Hampton was the eldest son of John Hampton Gleeson, who with his brother
Edward Burton Gleeson and their families emigrated to South Australia from
Calcutta on the
Emerald Isle, arriving in July 1838. The voyage was organised by the Australian Association of Bengal, and besides the two Gleeson families and a few other settlers (notably Judge James Donnithorne) and their servants, the ship carried a number of Indian
coolies, a large quantity of Indian merchandise and horses, including "Abdallah", an
Arab stallion brought out by E. B. Gleeson for breeding purposes. There were (unspecified) problems with the
Emerald Isle and her master. The Association's other ship, the
Guillardon, was wrecked at the mouth of the Ganges in 1840, and no further ships were despatched. The Gleesons established a pastoral property north of
Penwortham, on which Edward Burton Gleeson developed a township, naming it
Clare. John Hampton Gleeson died in 1840, when his son was barely six years old. Somehow he received on excellent education and developed a keen business sense, perhaps at his uncle's property "Inchiquin" near Clare. In 1860 he took a business trip to India, bringing back as a curio several pairs of "mangouste" or "ichneumon" (
mongoose), which he presented to Mr. Elliott (his landlord at the Globe Inn) and to the Botanic Garden. He secured a contract to supply a consignment of horses to India and in the same year entered into partnership with W. D. Kingsmill as station agents, with offices in Gilbert Place, Adelaide. He was active in a number of mining ventures in the northern
Flinders Ranges: New Cornwall Mineral Association Ltd. in 1861,
Duryea Mining Company in 1862, and was managing director of the Daly and Stanley Mining Company in 1868. He secured an Auctioneers licence in 1864. In 1869 he was appointed
Justice of the Peace. He was elected to the
S.A. Parliament as Member for
Flinders, serving from April 1870 to December 1871, his colleague being
Alfred Watts. He moved to New South Wales, and was a founder in 1874, with
W. K. Simms and
Edgar Chapman, of the "Adelaide Brewery" in
Waverley, the firm later known as Burrows and Gleeson, which took over Charles Mallon's "Waverley Brewery" in 1876. In 1876 the brewery was largely destroyed by flood; an interim arrangement with
Tooheys Brewery to fill their orders resulted in that firm gaining a toehold in the area which they never lost. Gleeson was also associated with Marshall's Brewery. He died at his home "Juliette", 44A Bayswater Road,
Darlinghurst He was a member of
Sydney Tattersalls Club and its treasurer in the last years of his life. ==Family==