History

St. Leonard’s is a coastal township on the end of the Bellarine Peninsula facing eastwards on to Port Phillip Bay. It is 46 km. south-south-west across the bay from Melbourne and 30 km. east of Geelong.
James Langdon took up his St. Leonard’s pastoral station in the area in 1849, possibly taking the name from the town of that name in Sussex, England. Langdon was a partner of George Cole, a Melbourne merchant and owner of Coles Wharf on the Yarra River. Cole later operated paddle steamers in Port Phillip Bay.
Shortly after Langdon's purchase Cole acquired land along the foreshore, both sides of the present-day St. Leonard’s. He is thought to have established a firewood trade from the Bellarine Peninsula to Melbourne and to have built the first houses at St. Leonard’s. A pier was functioning by 1862. Other early industries were brick-making and grazing.
Two short-lived schools in the 1860s were followed by the State school (1874) on land donated by Cole. In 1903 The Australian Handbook described St. Leonards -
The jetty was used for the carriage of agricultural produce as well as for poultry, pigs and fish. Along with several coastal towns on the Bellarine Peninsula, St. Leonards became a camping and fishing resort.
St. Leonards has grown steadily since the 1960s. It has a foreshore reserve from Indented Head (to its north) to Lower Bluff wild life reserve, interspersed with three camping areas. There is a large nature reserve adjoining Salt Lagoon, St. Leonards Lake and an adjoining reserve in the township, an arboretum and another reserve along the main road to the jetty. The shops and the bowling club are also along the main road. The golf course is near Salt Lagoon.
The census populations of St. Leonards have been 108 (1881), 96 (1947), 247 (1961), 733 (1976) and 1,206 (1991).

info source: www.arts.monash.edu.au/ncas/ multimedia/gazetteer/list/stleonards.html