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Catherine Booth Hospital (CBH) is a hospital and nursing school run by the Salvation Army in Nagercoil, Kanyakumari, Tamil Nadu, India. Catherine Booth House is a confidentially located domestic violence shelter in the Seattle/King County area. Operated by The Salvation Army, CBH has been serving battered women and their children since 1976.
Booth wrote In Darkest England while his wife, Catherine Booth, lay ill.Catherine died two weeks before the book was published. Booth wrote a tribute to Catherine in the book's preface, expressing his gratitude that "amid the ceaseless suffering of a dreadful malady, my dying wife found relief in considering and developing the suggestions which I have set forth".
Palmer's The Promise of the Father, published in 1859, which argued in favor of women in ministry, [69] later influenced Catherine Booth, co-founder of the Salvation Army. The practice of ministry by women is common but not universal within the denominations of the Holiness movement.
"Some Thoughts on the Present Aspect of the Crusade Against the State Regulation of Vice", Catherine Booth (1874) [62] Blackwell, Antoinette (1976) [first published 1875]. The Sexes Throughout Nature. Hyperion Press. ISBN 0-88355-349-X. [88] "Declaration of Rights of the Women of the United States", National Woman Suffrage Association, July 4 ...
William and Catherine Booth: 15 Woodbine Place, Bensham [52] 2005 William Booth came with his wife Catherine to Gateshead in 1858 where he was appointed minister to the Gateshead Methodist circuit. His preaching at the Bethesda Chapel was "immediately successful" and it was not uncommon for 2,000 people to fill the chapel and hear him preach. [53]
Commissioner Frederick St. George de Lautour Booth-Tucker, OF (21 March 1853 – 17 July 1929) was a senior Salvation Army officer of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, and the son-in-law of Willam and Catherine Booth, the Army's founders.
William Booth Memorial Training College in Denmark Hill, London, the College for Officer Training of The Salvation Army in the United Kingdom, is named after him, [24] as is the William Booth Primary School in his native Nottingham and William Booth Lane in central Birmingham. Many Salvation Army training colleges, schools, orphanages ...
— Thomas De Quincey, English essayist (8 August 1859), to a vision of his dead sister "Well, I must arrange my pillows for another night – when will this end!" [10]: 35 [35] — Washington Irving, American writer and diplomat (28 November 1859) John Brown's last words, passed to a jailor on his way to the gallows.