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Len Eacott
Australian Anglican bishop

Len Eacott

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Australian Anglican bishop
Work field
Gender
Male
Religion(s):
Age
76 years
Awards
Member of the Order of Australia
(2007)
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Leonard Sidney Eacott AM (born 14 June 1947), known as Len Eacott, is a retired Australian Anglican bishop, Army Chaplain, and military officer, who served as Anglican Bishop to the Australian Defence Force from 2007 to 2012.

Early life, parish ministry and military career

Eacott was born in Toowoomba and grew up in regional Queensland.

Eacott enlisted in the Royal Australian Infantry Corps of the Citizens Military Forces in November 1966, and from 1968 to 1972 fulfilled a National Service commitment. In early 1972, Eacott was commissioned as a General Service Officer (Royal Australian Infantry) in the Army Reserve, serving with 25 Battalion, the Royal Queensland Regiment and the Queensland University Regimewnt. He was also employed as a soil conservation field officer by the Queensland Department of Primary Industries until commencing training for Anglican ministry in 1980.

Eacott is a graduate of St Francis' Theological College and the University of Queensland and initially served in rural and city parish ministry and part-time Army Chaplaincy with the Army Reserve in Southern Queensland before transferring to full-time chaplaincy with Royal Australian Army Chaplains' Department..

As part of his military service as a chaplain, Eacott served as Anglican chaplain to the 3rd Brigade, Townsville, deployed in 1993 with the United Nations Transitional Authority in Cambodia , the Land Warfare Centre, Canungra. From 1996 to 1999 he served as senior chaplain to 1 Division at the Deployable Joint Force Headquarters at Enoggera. In 1999-2000 Eacott served as Senior Chaplain to the International Force in East Timor under General Sir Peter Cosgrove,, during which time he was involved with the exhumation and reburial of bodies suspected as being victims of crimes against humanity and established and maintained a burial register. He also served as Senior Chaplain to the Logistic Support Force and Command Chaplain to Land Headquarters in Sydney.

On 1 March 2002, Eacott was collated as Archdeacon to the Australian Army and on 18 November 2002 was appointed as Principal Chaplain to the Australian Army (Director General of Chaplaincy - Army), a position which he held until 21 January 2007. He retired from the Australian Regular Army on 15 June 2007.

Episcopal ministry

In May 2007, Eacott was appointed by the Primate of the Anglican Church and Chief of the Defence Force as Anglican Bishop to the Australian Defence Force, replacing Bishop Tom Frame. He was consecrated as bishop and installed as Anglican Bishop to the Australian Defence Force on 29 June 2007.

Eacott retired on 31 December 2012 after reaching the retirement age of 65 years and was succeeded by Bishop Ian Lambert.

Publications

“Practical Aspects of Planning and Implementing Strip Cropping Systems on Very Low Gradient Land.” Division of Land Utilisation, Queensland Department of Primary Industries, Report 79/4, 1979

“World War 1: A Testing Time for Australian Christianity.”Australian Defence Force Journal No 95, July/August 1992

“Ministry in War and Peace.” Chapter 11 of Stephen Hale & Andrew Curnow (eds) Facing the Future: Bishops Imagine a Different Church Melbourne: ACORN Press, 2009.


Awards and personal life

Eacott is married to Sandy and has three children, one of whom died from cancer in 1995.

Eacott was appointed as a Member of the Order of Australia (Military Division) in the 2007 Australia Day Honours for "exceptional service and outstanding devotion to duty as Principal Chaplain - Army and Head of Corps, Royal Australian Army Chaplains' Department".

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 20 Apr 2020. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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