After completing his studies at the Congregational Institute, Leonard took up pastoral roles with the church in
Barrow-in-Furness and
Colne. He began encouraging members of his church's social guild to take "recreative and educational" holidays, rather than trips in "
wakes week" to resorts such as
Blackpool. In 1891 he organised a holiday for 32 members of the Dockray Square Congregational Church in Colne, at
Ambleside in the
Lake District. Leonard later wrote that: "In those days we were content with very primitive arrangements, so long as they gave us the joy and freedom of the open fells." The success of his church trips led him to start organising holidays under the auspices of Paton's organisation, the National Home Reading Union (NHRU), which he continued to run after he moved from Colne back to London in 1895. He continued his pastoral duties until 1897, when he and Paton set up the Co-operative Holidays Association (CHA), with the aim of providing "recreative and educational holidays by purchasing or renting and furnishing houses and rooms in selected centres, by catering in such houses for parties of members and guests and by securing helpers who will promote the intellectual and social interests of the party with which they are associated". His approach to encouraging working people to admire the natural world and develop themselves was influenced by
Christian Socialism and by such figures as
Matthew Arnold,
John Ruskin,
Henry Thoreau and
William Morris. Early speakers at CHA holidays included
Hardwicke Rawnsley, and Leonard himself supported the
Independent Labour Party and spoke at rallies with
Keir Hardie. After moving first to
Whitby, then to
Rhu on the
Firth of Clyde, and then again to
Hayfield in Derbyshire, he and his wife and daughter settled at
Marple Bridge near
Stockport in 1910. With Leonard as Secretary, the CHA grew in scale, and by 1913 had 13 British holiday centres catering for over 13,000 guests. With John Lewis Paton, the son of J. B. Paton, he also organised trips to centres in Switzerland, France, Germany, Norway and Denmark, and before the
First World War arranged exchange visits between school and college students in Britain and Germany to encourage international friendship. ==Holiday Fellowship==