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Leslie Neale

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Name
  
Leslie Neale

Role
  
Actress

Spouse
  
John Dens (m. 1990)


Leslie Neale iamediaimdbcomimagesMMV5BMTU3NDQxMTIyNl5BMl5

Movies
  
Juvies, Uncle Sam, Unlikely Friends, Honey - I Blew Up the Kid

Similar People
  
John Dens, William Lustig, Randal Kleiser, Mark Wahlberg, Mike Farrell

Interview | Dir. Leslie Neale | August 2013 - NFMLA


Captain Leslie Bourneman Neale MBE ED (26 June 1886 – 26 August 1959) was a Methodist minister and chaplain to New Zealand troops during the last two years of World War I and for a total of 26 years.

Contents

Ordination and early service

He was educated at Pukekawa College and the University of Canterbury. Neale offered for the ministry in 1908 and was ordained in 1915 at Christchurch. He married Mary Vickers on 4 December of the same year, after a protracted engagement of seven years; the church had required that they not marry until Neale had been ordained. The conference of the following year approved his chaplaincy with the armed forces. Neale arrived in France in 1917 with the 22nd Reinforcements, saw action at Ypres and Passchendaele (where he was seriously wounded), and worked with the Commonwealth War Graves Commission at Gallipoli.

Middle years

On his return to New Zealand he worked in Dunedin and Christchurch ministering to the poor. He was Superintendent of the Dunedin Central Mission for 20 years, a founder of the Radio Church of the Helping Hand, and founded the Eventide Home in Dunedin.

With the onset of the great depression, he was instrumental in setting up the first work relief stations in the Christchurch suburb of Papanui. In 1929–31 Neale was elected to the Christchurch City Council.

As the depression subsided Neale setup up an early radio show and later health camps funded by special stamps.

World War II

When World War II broke out, Neale was elected president of the Methodist Church in 1940. At the time, the church forbade use of the pulpit to promote either recruitment or conscientious objection and as president Neale was critical of some pacifist ministers for breaking the policy.

Late life

In 1948 he was awarded an MBE for his long sustained community services. Neale retired in Auckland in 1951, and died on 26 August 1959.

References

Leslie Neale Wikipedia


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