Lees was born in Ashton-under-Lyne, Lancashire, United Kingdom, the eldest son of William Lees, a cotton farmer and Justice of the Peace,[2] and his wife, Emma (daughter of William Clare). Lees married twice, firstly to Winifred May, daughter of the Revd J. M. Cranswick, and secondly to Joanna Mary, daughter of Herbert Linnell. He had no children.[1]
Lees soon showed himself to be a vigorous worker and a good preacher. He was at Melbourne for less than seven years before he died, but his episcopate was marked by the undertaking of the completion of St Paul's Cathedral and by a great increase in the social work of the church; more especially in connexion with the various homes conducted by the mission of St James and St John and the Church of England free kindergartens. He visited England in 1928 and died suddenly at Bishopscourt, East Melbourne, on 10 January 1929.[1]
Lees never spared himself and overwork was a contributing cause of his comparatively early death from coronary vascular disease.[1] He had bright personality and was much like by everyone, whether in an industrial parish like Swansea or as archbishop of Melbourne. At synod he was an excellent chairman, speaking little himself, but giving his rulings with decision. In the evangelistic tradition of the diocese, he belonged to no party and his ability, humanity and broad outlook, made him an excellent leader of his church.[1]
Publications
Lees' published works include:
St Paul's Epistles to Thessalonica (1905)
The Work of Witness and the Promise of Power (1908)
The Joy of Bible Study (1909)
The King's Highway (1910)
St Paul and his Converts (1910), third impression (1916)
Christ and his Slaves (1911)
The Sunshine of the Good News (1912)
The Divine Master in Home Life (1915)
The Practice of the Love of Christ (1915)
The Eyes of his Glory (1916)
St Paul's Friends (1917)
The Love that Ceases to Calculate (1918)
God's Garden and Ours (1918)
Failure and Recovery (1919)
The Starting Place of Victory (1919)
The Promise of Life The Life that is in Christ Jesus (1919)
The Divine Master in Home Life
Lees was also a contributor to Hastings' A Dictionary of Christ and the Gospels.[2]