The son of the Rev. Stanley Leathes, the Professor of Hebrew at King's College London and his wife Matilda (née Butt),[2][3] a descendant of a Dr. Butt who was a physician to Henry VIII,[2] his older brother was the poet, historian and senior Civil Servant Sir Stanley Mordaunt Leathes. John Beresford Leathes was educated in the Classics at Winchester College from 1878 to 1883. The College at that time possessed no science facilities, so he received little science teaching there. When Gladstone visited the College Leathes, welcoming him formally Ad Portas as Prefect of Hall, delivered a speech to him in Latin, to which Gladstone responded in English.[2]
In 1909 he became Honorary Secretary of The Physiological Society, but had to resign the post when he moved to Canada later in the year when he was appointed to the newly created Chair in Pathological Chemistry at the University of Toronto. While here he founded a local Medical Research Society and when, in 1912, a new building beside the Toronto General Hospital was opened housing the Department of Pathology and Bacteriology and the Department of Pathological Chemistry Leathes established laboratories there for graduate students interested in a course of teaching and research in chemical medicine. He remained in Toronto until 1914 when he returned to the UK to take up the post of Professor of Physiology at the University of Sheffield, where he also served two terms as Dean of the Faculty of Medicine.[5]
During World War I he was in charge of the nephritis wards at the Northern General Hospital in Sheffield and was appointed to the staff of the hospital as Honorary Physiologist in addition to being responsible for the establishment of biochemical laboratories at the two general hospitals in the city in 1919. He represented Sheffield University on the General Medical Council from 1919 to 1938, and for 10 years was an editor of The Journal of Physiology. Leathes remained at Sheffield until his retirement in 1933.
After leaving Sheffield Leathes moved firstly to Wantage and then to the University of Oxford where he worked for a short period with Professor John Mellanby, FRS in the laboratory of physiology; however, this activity was curtailed with the outbreak of World War II in 1939, when Leathes retired successively to Lyme Regis, London and Southbourne, finally settling after the war in Montreux in Switzerland where he died in September 1956 aged 92.
Problems in Animal Metabolism; A Course of Lectures Given in the Physiological Laboratory of the London University at South Kensington in the Summer Term, 1904 London : John Murray, (1906)