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William
Booth embarked upon his ministerial career in 1852, desiring to win the
lost multitudes of England to Christ. He walked the streets of London to
preach the gospel of Jesus Christ to the poor, the homeless, the hungry,
and the destitute.
Booth abandoned the conventional concept of a church
and a pulpit, instead taking his message to the people. His fervor led
to disagreement with church leaders in London, who preferred traditional
methods. As a result, he withdrew from the church and traveled
throughout England, conducting evangelistic meetings. His wife,
Catherine, could accurately be called a cofounder of The Salvation Army.
In 1865, William Booth was invited to hold a series of
evangelistic meetings in the East End of London. He set up a tent in a
Quaker graveyard, and his services became an instant success. This
proved to be the end of his wanderings as an independent traveling
evangelist. His renown as a religious leader spread throughout London,
and he attracted followers who were dedicated to fight for the souls of
men and women.
Thieves, prostitutes, gamblers, and drunkards were
among Booth's first converts to Christianity. To congregations who were desperately
poor, he preached hope and salvation. His aim was to lead people to
Christ and link them to a church for further spiritual guidance.
Many churches, however, did not accept Booth's
followers because of their past. So Booth continued giving his new
converts spiritual direction, challenging them to save others like
themselves. Soon, they too were preaching and singing in the streets as
a living testimony to the power of God.
In 1867, Booth had only 10 full-time workers, but by
1874, the number had grown to 1,000 volunteers and 42 evangelists, all
serving under the name "The Christian Mission." Booth assumed
the title of general superintendent, with his followers calling him
"General." Known as the "Hallelujah Army," the
converts spread out of the East End of London into neighboring areas and
then to other cities.
Booth was reading a printer's proof of the 1878 annual
report when he noticed the statement "The Christian Mission is a
volunteer army." Crossing out the words "volunteer army,"
he penned in "Salvation Army." From those words came the basis
of the foundation deed of The Salvation Army.
From that point, converts became soldiers of Christ
and were known then, as now, as Salvationists. They launched an
offensive throughout the British Isles, in some cases facing real
battles as organized gangs mocked and attacked them. In spite of
violence and persecution, some 250,000 people were converted under the
ministry of The Salvation Army between 1881 and 1885.
Meanwhile, the Army was gaining a foothold in the
United States. Lieutenant Eliza Shirley had left England to join her
parents, who had migrated to America earlier in search for work. In
1879, she held the first meeting of The Salvation Army in America, in
Philadelphia. The Salvationists were received enthusiastically. Shirley
wrote to General Booth, begging for reinforcements. None were available
at first. Glowing reports of the work in Philadelphia, however,
eventually convinced Booth, in 1880, to send an official group to
pioneer the work in America.
On March 10, 1880, Commissioner George Scott Raiton
and seven women officers knelt on the dockside at Battery Park in New
York City to give thanks for their safe arrival. At their first official
street meeting, these pioneers were met with unfriendly actions, as had
happened in Great Britain. They were ridiculed, arrested, and attacked.
Several officers and soldiers even gave their lives.
Three years later, Railton and other Salvationists had
expanded their operation into California, Connecticut, Indiana,
Kentucky, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Missouri, New Jersey, New
York, Ohio, and Pennsylvania. President Grover Cleveland received a
delegation of Salvation Army officers in 1886 and gave the organization
a warm personal endorsement. This was the first recognition from the
White House and would be followed by similar receptions from succeeding
presidents.
The Salvation Army movement expanded rapidly to
Canada, Australia, France, Switzerland, India, South Africa, Iceland,
and local neighborhood units. The Salvation Army is active in virtually
every corner of the world.
General Booth's death in 1912 was a great loss to The
Salvation Army. However, he had laid a firm foundation' even his death
could not deter the ministry's onward march. His eldest son, Bramwell
Booth, succeeded him.
Edward J. Higgins, served as the first elected
general, beginning in 1929. The first female general was Booth's
daughter, the dynamic Evangeline Booth, serving from 1934 to 1939. The
Army's fifth general was George Carpenter, succeeded in 1946 by Albert
Orsborn. General Wilfred Kitching was elected in 1954, succeeded by
Frederick Coutts in 1963. Erik Wickberg followed in 1969; Clarence
Wiseman in 1974; Arnold Brown in 1977; Jarl Wahlstrom in 1981; and Eva
Burrows, the second female general, in 1986. General Bramwell Tillsley
was elected in 1993 and was succeeded by General Paul Rader in 1994.
General John Gowans was elected in 1999 and commands the Army from
International Headquarters in London, England.
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