Nicholas Philpot Leader (19 January 1773 – 7 February 1836) was an Irish barrister, landowner, businessman and Liberal politician. He sat in the House of Commons of the United Kingdom from 1830 to 1832.[1]
Leader was the eldest son of William Leader, who owned extensive estates in County Cork, including the family's homes at Mount Leader near Millstreet and Dromagh Castle neat Kanturk. After education at Trinity College Dublin, the King's Inn and the Middle Temple, he was called to the Irish bar in 1798.[2]
At the 1830 general election, Leader's name was suggested for several seats,[2] but he was eventually nominated for Kilkenny City as a Liberal supporter of reform.[2]
Leader died at Nashville, County Cork in February 1836. His eldest son Nicholas succeeded to his estates,[2] and in 1861 was elected as a Conservative MP for County Cork.[3]