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Lucy wrote the song "Keep on Believing" for the Salvation Army. In 1909 her husband died. For a brief time she was engaged to Commissioner Cornelius Obadiah Phelps, before her brother Bramwell ended it. She went on to become the territorial commander for Denmark, Norway, and South America, before retiring in 1934. [1]
The War Cry, a 1904 edition. The first edition of The War Cry was printed on 27 December 1879 in London, England. [1] In 1880, US Salvation Army Commissioner George Scott Railton published the Salvation News, a small newsletter.
A book detailing over 500 films in which the Salvation Army appears or is mentioned was published in 2020 entitled The Salvation Army at the Movies. [189] The Salvation Army began producing silent films when they started their own film studio called The Limelight Department in 1892, [190] which was the first in Australia. The original studio ...
Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter. Original article source: Bengals' Chase Brown upset with fine for jumping into Salvation ...
In the late 1970s, James and Deborah worked at the large Miami Salvation Army center, participating in inner-city mission work. ACMTC may have taken its name from a sermon by Salvation Army co-founder Catherine Booth titled "Aggressive Christianity". [15]
The Salvation Army, London, (1912–13) 'Gideon Ouseley, an Oldtime Irish Salvationist' (1904) 'The History of our South African War' (1902) 'Lieut.-Col. Jacob Junker of Germany ... With a chapter contributed by Commissioner W. E. Oliphant' (1903) 'Peter Cartwright, God's Rough-rider' (1902) 'Some Prophecies Fulfilled. Being a brief account of ...
The Red Kettle Campaign, which is the longest-running of its kind, is in its 133rd year and solicits donations to provide Christmas gifts, food, shelter, rent and utility assistance to those in need.
From its beginnings in Adelaide the Salvation Army spread rapidly and soon reached Victoria where the first corps in the state was opened in December 1882 at North Melbourne. By 1890, just 10 years after the first meeting in Adelaide, there were 255 corps and 419 outposts throughout Australia, manned by 747 officers, mostly "home-grown".