Charles Leslie Dundas (1 November 1847 - 17 March 1932) was an eminent Anglican priest in the late nineteenth [1] and early twentieth centuries. [2]
Born into an ecclesiastical family [3] on 1 November 1847, [4] he was educated at The King's School, Canterbury, [5] and Brasenose College, [6] Oxford. [7] He was ordained in 1870. [8] After a curacy at St Peter’s, Bournemouth, he was Vicar of Charlton Kings from 1875 [9] until his appointment as Dean [10] of Hobart and Administrator of the Diocese of Tasmania, [11] a post he accepted in 1885 [12] and held for a decade. During this time he was recommended as a suitable candidate for the Bishopric of Tanzania, but was not appointed. [13] After this he held incumbencies at Charminster [14] with Stratton; [15] and then Milton Abbas. [16] In January 1900, the Bishop of Salisbury awarded him a prebendal stall [17] . He was Archdeacon of Dorset from February 1902 [18] to 1926, and a Canon Residentiary at Salisbury Cathedral from 1914 to [19] 1928.
A Fellow of Jesus College, Oxford, [20] he died on 17 March 1932. [21]
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