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, he was educated at The King's School, Canterbury,[4] and Brasenose College,[5] Oxford.
[7] After a curacy at St Peter’s, Bournemouth, he was Vicar of Charlton Kings from 1875[8] until his appointment as Dean[9] of Hobart and Administrator of the Diocese of Tasmania,[10] a post he accepted in 1885[11] and held for a decade.
During this time he was recommended as a suitable candidate for the Bishopric of Tanzania, but was not appointed.
[16] He was Archdeacon of Dorset from February 1902[17] to 1926, and a Canon Residentiary at Salisbury Cathedral from 1914 to[18] 1928.