Harry Dan Leigh Viener, CBE, UCd'I (26 December 1868 โ 7 May 1947) was an eminent AnglicanChaplain in the first half of the 20th century. In 1918, he joined the fledgling Royal Air Force Chaplains Branch as its first Chaplain-in-Chief.
On 5 October 1882, he was commissioned into the 1st (Oxford University) Volunteer Battalion, Oxfordshire Light Infantry, as a second lieutenant; nicknamed the Oxford University Volunteers, this battalion was the precursor to the Oxford University Officers' Training Corps.[5] He resigned his commission on 25 March 1893.[6] From 1892 to 1899, he was a schoolmaster and private tutor.
On 12 November 1901, Viener was commissioned as a chaplain of the Royal NavyChaplaincy Service (RNCS).[8] The RNCS does not give ranks to its chaplain and so while he served with the Royal Navy, Viener simply held the appointment Chaplain.
After serving 25 years as a military chaplain, he returned to civilian ministry. From 1927 to 1934, he was Rector of St Nicholas' Church, Chawton, in the Diocese of Winchester. He retired from full-time ministry in 1934.[12]