The life of General William Booth : the founder of the Salvation Army

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100 1 ‡aBegbie, Harold, ‡d1871-1929.
245 1 4 ‡aThe life of General William Booth : ‡bthe founder of the Salvation Army / ‡cby Harold Begbie.
260 ‡aNew York : ‡bMacmillan Co., ‡c1920.
300 ‡a2 volumes : ‡billustrations ; ‡c23 cm
336 ‡atext ‡btxt ‡2rdacontent
337 ‡aunmediated ‡bn ‡2rdamedia
338 ‡avolume ‡bnc ‡2rdacarrier
504 ‡aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
505 0 0 ‡gVolume Two -- ‡gPart I -- ‡t1882: A critical year -- ‡t1883: A vague but Episcopal charge of immorality -- ‡t1883-1885: Negotiations with the Church of England -- ‡t1885: The purity crusade -- ‡t1880-1885: Family life in the 'eighties -- ‡t1886-1887: In the character of pilgrim father -- ‡t1888-1889: The beginning of a new adventure -- ‡gPart II -- ‡t1889-1890: "In darkest England and the way out" -- ‡t1890: The death-bed of Catherine Booth -- ‡t1890: The conflicting reception given to the darkest England scheme -- ‡t1891: Troubles of an overworked and suffering autocrat -- ‡t1891-1892: At the threshold of a new phase -- ‡t1892: Popularity of the General and the spirit of the Army -- ‡t1892-1893: Social reforms and family differences -- ‡t1893: Going back to first causes -- ‡t1894: The lion is interviewed by the lamb -- ‡t1894-1896: Which tells of dispatches, a storm at sea, how William Booth was boarded in a bedroom and bored at a tea-meeting, and of an interview with W.E. Gladstone -- ‡t1897-1900: The beginning of the fight against old age -- ‡t1901: On the threshold of the picturesque period -- ‡t1902: In which personal sorrows clash with public esteem -- ‡t1903: The dawn of a secret hope and the end of a great campaign -- ‡t1903: Approaching old age in a suburban villa -- ‡t1903-1904: Which tells how the General lost his "left hand" -- ‡t1904: Which narrates, among other matters, how William Booth washed his hands in a workman's pail before visiting King Edward the Seventh -- ‡t1905: The old campaigner visits the Holy Land, receives the freedom of the city of London, is honoured in his native town, and swears by the spade -- ‡t1906: In which the modern Moses, in the character of empire-builder dreams of a promised land -- ‡t1907: From interviews with royalties William Booth passes to the Banzai or Japan, enters the first shadows of blindness, and receives the Hon. D.C.L. (Oxon.) degree -- ‡t1908: The General does a little lobbying, falls among politicans, shakes hands with a bishop and a police-inspector, and undergoes his first operation -- ‡t1909: Affording further evidence of royal favour and concluding with another stage on the road to blindness -- ‡t1910: Wherein the General weeps over the sufferings of children, tells Mr. Winston Churchill he is not converted, thanks God for a year of uninterrupted mercy, and makes plans to help prisoners -- ‡t1911: The darkness deepens -- ‡t1912: He desires to go home -- ‡tConclusion
505 0 0 ‡gVolume One -- ‡t1829: The times into which our hero was born -- ‡t1828-1838: His parentage, a tale of the house in which he was born, and the character of his environment -- ‡t1838-1844: Which tells of a difficult road leading up to a youthful conversion -- ‡t1845: Beginnings of the new life and the first sermon ever preached by William Booth -- ‡t1845: What he believed at this time -- ‡t1845-1848: Obedience to authority coupled with the determination to achieve greatness -- ‡t1849: London; The early Victorians -- ‡t1849: The call to preach -- ‡t1850: A crisis in Methodism -- ‡t1850-1851: Tells how William Booth became a pastor, and introduces the reader to Catherine Mumford -- ‡t1852: The beginnings of a love story -- ‡t1852: Puritan love-letters -- ‡t1852-1853: William Booth as a successful evangelist. Catherine Mumford as guardian angel -- ‡t1853-1854: William Booth to Catherine Mumford -- ‡t1854-1855: The evangelist troubled about many things -- ‡t1855: Marriage, honeymoon, and the theology of revivalism -- ‡t1855-1856: The happiness of a young married couple -- ‡t1857-1861: Which tells of a thorn in the flesh, sectarian differences, and a break with Methodism -- ‡t1861-1864: Wilderness -- ‡t1865: The move to London -- ‡t1865-1867: A lady lodger's account of the Booths' home life -- ‡t1865-1878: The first London mission -- ‡t1878: A summing up in middle age -- ‡t1874-1878: From the Christian mission towards the Salvation Army -- ‡t1877-1878: Which gives some account of the happiness and excitement of the mission and descriptions of "holiness meetings" -- ‡t1876-1878: Letters of the period in various moods -- ‡t1878-1879: The Rev. William Booth becomes general of the Salvation Army -- ‡t1881-1882: The question of holy communion -- ‡t1877-1881: Hostility, suspicion, and opposition
538 ‡aMode of access: Internet.
600 1 7 ‡aBooth, William, ‡d1829-1912. ‡2fast ‡0(OCoLC)fst00015345
600 1 0 ‡aBooth, William, ‡d1829-1912.
610 2 7 ‡aSalvation Army. ‡2fast ‡0(OCoLC)fst00532138
610 2 0 ‡aSalvation Army ‡vBiography.
655 7 ‡aBiographies. ‡2lcgft
655 7 ‡aBiographies. ‡2fast ‡0(OCoLC)fst01919896
655 4 ‡aBiography.
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