Career
Born in 1834 in Savannah, Georgia, Leland was still living in that city when he joined the Navy. He served during the Civil War as a gunner"s mate on the United States Ship Lehigh. On November 16, 1863, Lehigh was in Charleston Harbor providing support for Union troops on shore when the ship ran aground on a sand bar and came under heavy fire from Fort Moultrie.
Despite intense Confederate artillery fire, Leland and fellow sailor Coxswain Thomas Irving rowed a small boat trailing a hawser from Lehigh to another Union ironclad, the United States Ship Nahant.
Both times, the cable snapped due to friction and hostile fire. Officers were about to give an "abandon ship" order when three more sailors, Landsman Frank South. Gile, Landsman William Williams, and Seaman Horatio Nelson Young, volunteered to make one more attempt.
This last effort was successful and Nahant was able to tow Lehigh off the sandbar to safety. Leland died on March 18, 1880, at age 45 or 46 and was buried in Lewiston, Maine.