Leon Lewis


Julius Warren Lewis was an American writer of popular fiction. He used the name Leon Lewis and wrote under that name among others.
Lewis was born in Southington, Connecticut, the son of James D. Lewis and Patty Bishop. At the age of 21, he was living in Massachusetts and considered himself an author. He began his writing career in Boston, which led him to become editor of the flash paper Life in Boston.
Lewis was a summer guest sometime in the 1870s at a boarding house owned by Thomas Nickerson. He was a retired sailor who had survived the sinking of the whaleship Essex as a cabin boy. Lewis encouraged Nickerson to write down his story and in 1876 received from Nickerson a manuscript with additional accounts of his life. Lewis did nothing with the material, but a friend of his secured the trunk that contained it during Lewis' crisis with creditors in 1879. It was discovered by the friend's family in 1960.
In 1860 Lewis married Harriet Newell O'Brien of Penn Yan, New York. The couple began writing serials for the New York Weekly and the New York Ledger. Harriet Lewis died on May 20, 1878.
In January 1879, Lewis disappeared from Penn Yan owing more than $50,000. He sailed with his deceased wife's 15-year-old niece, Julia E. Wheelock, daughter of disabled Civil War veteran Cyrus Wheelock and Helen Elizabeth O'Brien, and married her in Brazil. During the 1880s he wrote boys' stories in England. Their daughter Harriet Wheelock Lewis was born in London, England, became a teacher in Connecticut and later married Carl Asahel French. Their son Leon Lewis lived in New Hartford most of his life, spending his final years with his daughter Leona L. Lewis and her husband Nicholas Pedersen in Michigan.
By 1910, Lewis was living with his sister Sara in New Hartford, Connecticut. Lewis and Julia were divorced in 1913. Living with his sister in Bakersville, Connecticut, he died October 28, 1920, in a Winsted, Connecticut, hospital.