Born Cynthia Hicks Van Name in
Buffalo, New York to John Van Name and Rachel Hicks. She married Charles Egbert Leonard, a printer with Jewett Thomas & Co, in 1852. They had eight children, the most famous of whom was entertainer
Lillian Russell. While a young woman in Buffalo, Leonard became the first woman to stand behind a counter as a salesperson and later became a member of Buffalo's first Woman's Social and Literary Club. Four years after her marriage, in 1856, the couple moved from
Detroit, Michigan, to
Clinton, Iowa, where Charles founded the
Clinton Herald, that community's newspaper, still in existence today. Cynthia Leonard was on the executive committee of the Soldiers' Relief Association, which established the first soldiers' home in the state of Iowa, attending to the housing needs of
Union soldiers recently released from the 18th Regimental Hospital, then quartered in Clinton. Leonard organized the Good Samaritan Society, and after the
Great Chicago Fire in 1881, she established a homeless shelter for the "unfortunate" women of the city. She was instrumental in the decision to place matrons in Chicago prisons, and she authored two novels:
Adventures of Lena Rouden, or the Rebel Spy and
Fading Footprints, or the Last of the Iroquois. In a May 3, 1914, interview with
Djuna Barnes, Lillian Russell paid this tribute to her mother: To be a great woman, a great person, one must have suffered, even ... suffered in great crises. What have I done that I should be famous – nothing but powdered a bit gently the cheeks that God gave me and smoothed the hair that I was born with, laughed and proven a faultless set of teeth. Any grinning idol, well painted, can do as well, but the real women, the big women, are those who toil and never write of it, those who labor and never cry of it, those who forfeit all and never seek reward. Begin this article with the name Lillian Russell, but end it with the name of such as was Cynthia Leonard. ==References==