Humphrey Leech


Humphrey Leech was an English priest of the Church of England and Catholic convert, known as a Jesuit author.

Life

Leech was born at Drayton in Hales, Shropshire. He was educated at Shrewsbury School, and matriculated at Brasenose College, Oxford, on 13 November 1590. His parents died, he went home, and later he continued his studies at Cambridge, where he proceeded B.A. at Queens' College, and M.A. at Emmanuel College. At Oxford, he was incorporated in the degree of M.A. on 23 June 1602.
For a short time Leach was vicar of St. Alkmond's Church, Shrewsbury. On going back to Oxford he was appointed one of the chaplains of Christ Church. A sermon which he preached concerning precepts and evangelical counsels gave offence to the university, and he was summoned before the pro-vice-chancellor, Leonard Hutten, as anti-Calvinist. He was silenced from preaching, and suspended from his commons and function in the college for three months.
After appealing ineffectually to Richard Bancroft, the Archbishop of Canterbury, Leech went to the College of the English Jesuits at St. Omer, and renounced Protestantism. After some time at Arras, in 1609 he entered the English College, Rome, under the assumed name Henry Eccles, and on 2 May 1610 he took the college oath. He was ordained priest on 21 April 1612, left Rome for England on 22 April 1618, and in the same year entered the Society of Jesus.
In 1621 Leech was at the English Jesuit college at Liège, and in the following year he was on the English mission in the "College of St. Aloysius". For some time he resided, as chaplain, with Mr. Massey of Hooton, Cheshire, where he died on 18 July 1629.

Works

Leech was the author of: