The Salvation Army began in 1865 in London, England as a way to help people in need. The organization was founded by William and Catherine Booth, who believed that everyone deserved a better life.

 

Founding

  • William Booth was a Methodist minister who preached to the poor and disadvantaged in his local area.
  • The Booths worked with Christian businessmen who were concerned for the poor.
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  • The Booths preached on the streets of East London, outside the Blind Beggar pub.
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  • The Booths started a new organization called The Christian Mission.
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  • The Booths adopted a credo of "soup, soap, and salvation".
  • 
 


    Growth

  • The Booths helped people living in the slums, set up soup kitchens, and ran rescue homes.
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  • The Booths oversaw the world's first free labor exchange.
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  • The Salvation Army spread across the world.
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  • The Salvation Army is an evangelical Christian denomination organized along military lines.
 


Today

The Salvation Army continues to perform lifesaving work in over 130 countries.

The History Of The Salvation Army


We started on the streets of London to reach the people most in need:

The Salvation Army began on the streets of East London in 1865 when Methodists, William and Catherine Booth, abandoned the traditional concept of a church pulpit to take God’s word directly to the people.

The Booths preached and lived out a doctrine of practical Christianity — soup, soap and salvation — to encourage both social and spiritual transformation among society’s most vulnerable and marginalized people.

Their work included setting up shelters for people who were homeless, a family tracing service, running soup kitchens, helping people living in the slums and setting up rescue homes for women fleeing domestic abuse and prostitution. The couple also oversaw the world’s first free labour exchange and campaigned to improve working conditions.

The Christian Mission:
The movement grew rapidly outside of London and became known as the Christian Mission, with William Booth as its General-Superintendent. In 1878 the name was changed to The Salvation Army and the organisation adopted a quasi-military structure with officers and members wearing a military-style uniform.


Salvation Army officers during World War 2 evacuation.

The Salvation Army movement spread rapidly across the British Isles and within decades was established across the globe in countries such as America, Canada, Australia, France, Switzerland, India, South Africa, Iceland, and Germany.

The Salvation Army’s International Heritage Centre collects, preserves and researches material about the work and ministry undertaken across the globe over its history of more than 150 years.

The challenges people were facing in the late 19th Century — homelessness, addiction, loneliness and unemployment — are much the same as today. The Salvation Army has continued its founders work, tackling issues and working at the heart of communities to offer practical help, unconditional assistance and support to transform lives.

Today, The Salvation Army is a church and charity that is active in virtually every corner of the world and serves in more than 130 countries offering God’s hope and love to all those in need without discrimination.



Salvation Army care worker at Villa Adastra care home


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