James C. Leonard
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Rev. James C.[a] Leonard BA (1825 – 15 August 1891) was the first Congregationalist minister of Perth, Western Australia. He was headmaster of two private schools in South Australia; near Gawler and at Angaston.
Leonard was born in England, a son of John Leonard of Paddington.[1] He was educated at London University, where he qualified BA, and left for Western Australia aboard the emigrant ship Will Watch with his wife and a small family, arriving in February 1852. He preached his first sermon at the Independent church, Perth, on 29 February 1852.[2] His wife Mary Ann Leonard, née Rose (1830 – 14 April 1852) died a few months later.[3] He married again, to Anne Douglas, née Smithers (c. 1815 – 26 April 1908),[4] widow of Captain Harrison Douglas (1818 – 30 June 1852),[5] on 26 April 1854[6] and without waiting for a replacement (it took four years),[7] moved in 1856 to Bentley, in the hills near Gawler, South Australia,[8] where, on top of his clerical duties, he ran a farm. He left the ministry in 1861[9] to conduct a school in Bentley; and in 1869 took over E. P. Nesbit's boys' school at Angaston.[10]