He was born in
Auchtermuchty on 27 January 1848 the eldest son of John Glasse and educated there in the Free Church School. He studied at
St Andrews University and at
New College, Edinburgh. Although training as a minister of the Free Church he joined the established
Church of Scotland and was licensed to preach by the Presbytery of Edinburgh in 1876 and ordained as minister of
Old Greyfriars in
Edinburgh on 27 March 1877 - a remarkable position as his first job as minister. He then lived at 21 Tantallon Place. At Greyfriars he was at the centre of a socialist studies group held at his
manse in Tantallon Place whose membership included
Annie Besant,
Peter Kropotkin, and
William Morris. A personal friend of Morris, those whom he tutored also included
James Connolly and
James Thompson Bain. He was a member of the Scottish Land and Labour League; and although the SLLL itself sought to maintain its distance from the
Socialist League, at the urging of Morris, Glasse joined the Socialist League in 1887, his membership fee of paid to
Philip Webb as recorded by the latter in a letter to Morris. In his 1919 history of the Scottish Labour Party
David Lowe observed that Glasse "gathered around him many ardent idealists, to whom he administered doses of Proudon and Marx". Glasse was a pivotal figure in the emergence of Scottish socialism in Edinburgh, going on to found the Glasgow branch of the
Independent Labour Party with
John Bruce Glasier. He was unusual for the time for being one of the few Church of Scotland ministers who was politically committed to the Labour movement before World War One. His holding a respected position within the Church while espousing socialist beliefs and publishing the below-mentioned pamphlets indicated a significant shift towards political pluralism in the attitudes of the Church since the middle of the 19th century, when radicals such as
Rayner Stephens and
Patrick Brewster had incurred more negative consequences for their beliefs. He founded the first
Fabian Society in Scotland in 1892, in Edinburgh. He was patron of the Greyfriars Choral Society and an executive committee member of the Edinburgh Unity of The Empire Association. He was awarded an honorary Doctor of Divinity (DD) by
St Andrews University in 1895. He died in 1918. ==Family==