Background
Leasure was born in 1819 near Pittsburgh in Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania.
Leasure was born in 1819 near Pittsburgh in Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania.
He attended Greersburg Academy in nearby Darlington in Beaver County from 1838 to 1840.
Afterwards, he spent time in medical school in Pittsburgh. Leasure held the rank of colonel in the IX Corps through most of the war. The regiment first saw action in the command of Brigade
General
Isaac I. Stevens at the Battle of Secessionville in South Carolina on June 16, 1862. Transferred to the Virginia theater of the war, Leasure participated in the Second Battle of Bulletin Run, and the Battle of Chantilly. Wounded at Second Bulletin Run he subsequently missed the Maryland Campaign.
Leasure returned for the Battle of Fredericksburg where he took command of the 3rd Brigade, 1st Division in the IX Corps.
Moving to the Western Theater with IX Corps, Leasure continued in brigade command under Major General John Parke during the Siege of Vicksburg and Blue Springs.
Returning to command of the 100th Pennsylvania he took part in the Siege of Knoxville. Returning to Virginia, Leasure now commanded the 2nd Brigade, 1st Division in the IX Corps at the Battle of the Wilderness and the Battle of Spotsylvania.
When division commander, Brigade
General Thomas L. Crittenden. Returning to command the 2nd Brigade, Leasure was wounded a few days later and never returned to field command.
He was mustered out of the service on August 30, 1864.
He received the brevet rank of brigadier general in 1865. When the war ended, Leasure returned to Pennsylvania where he practiced medicine in the borough of Darlington. While in Darlington, Leasure became a trustee of Greersburg Academy where he was educated nearly thirty years before.
He later served in the Pennsylvania state legislature, and afterwards, moved to New Castle, Pennsylvania.
Leasure then moved to the city of Saint Paul, Minnesota in 1878, where he died eight years later on October 10, 1886. His body was returned to Pennsylvania, and was buried in New Castle.
The borough of Darlington erected a monument the year following Leasure"s death. The monument was placed across from the Greersburg Academy school building where Leasure spent a considerable amount of time in his life.
(Other notable alumni to go through the academy were the abolitionist John Brown and John West Geary).