Leslie Edward Stradling (11 February 1908 – 8 January 1998) was an Anglican bishop in three separate African dioceses during the mid-20th century.
Born on 11 February 1908 [1] and educated at King Edward VII School, Sheffield [2] and The Queen's College, Oxford; he was made a deacon on Trinity Sunday 1933 (11 June) [3] and ordained a priest the next Trinity Sunday (27 May 1934) — both times by Richard Parsons, Bishop of Southwark, at Southwark Cathedral. [4] After a curacy at St Paul's, Lorrimore Square he was Vicar of St Luke's, Camberwell [5] and then of St Anne's, Wandsworth [6] before being appointed the Church's youngest bishop in 1945. [7] He was consecrated a bishop on St James's Day 1945 (25 July), by Geoffrey Fisher, Archbishop of Canterbury, at Westminster Abbey. [8] Translated from Masasi to be the first Bishop of South-West Tanganyika in 1952, his final post was as Bishop of Johannesburg.
He died in 1998 in Cape Town. [9]
Leslie Edward Stradling (11 February 1908 – 8 January 1998) was an Anglican bishop in three separate African dioceses during the mid-20th century.
Born on 11 February 1908 [1] and educated at King Edward VII School, Sheffield [2] and The Queen's College, Oxford; he was made a deacon on Trinity Sunday 1933 (11 June) [3] and ordained a priest the next Trinity Sunday (27 May 1934) — both times by Richard Parsons, Bishop of Southwark, at Southwark Cathedral. [4] After a curacy at St Paul's, Lorrimore Square he was Vicar of St Luke's, Camberwell [5] and then of St Anne's, Wandsworth [6] before being appointed the Church's youngest bishop in 1945. [7] He was consecrated a bishop on St James's Day 1945 (25 July), by Geoffrey Fisher, Archbishop of Canterbury, at Westminster Abbey. [8] Translated from Masasi to be the first Bishop of South-West Tanganyika in 1952, his final post was as Bishop of Johannesburg.
He died in 1998 in Cape Town. [9]