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Gawler Salvation Army cartoon
Title : Gawler Salvation Army cartoon Gawler Salvation Army cartoon
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Creator : Woodhouse, Herbert J., ca. 1854-ca. 1929
Source : Adelaide punch, 7 September 1883, p. 697
Date of creation : 1883
Format : Cartoon
Contributor : State Library catalogue
Catalogue record
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Description :

General William Booth, a Methodist minister,founded his 'Christian Mission' in London in 1865, which in 1878 was re-named the Salvation Army. The first Australian meeting of the Salvation Army was held in Adelaide, in Botanic Park, in September 1880, following the meeting of two Englishmen, Edward Saunders and John Gore, through the outdoor evangelistic meetings of Matthew Burnett. Saunders had previously heard Gore give his 'testimony' at one of Burnett's lively revival meetings. The Army initially met in Adelaide in the Labour League Hall in Hindley Street and in White's Rooms. Following the arrival of Captain and Mrs Sutherland to take charge of the local body in 1881, a building in Light Square was rented for the 'barracks'.

The movement grew rapidly and by the mid 1890s had 65 'corps' and 75 'ouposts' across South Australia. Initially there was much opposition, particularly in the media. The Moonta meeting was taken to court by the editor of the Yorke's Peninsula Advertiser in 1883. Politician Alexander Hay declared in Parliament in 1884 that, 'the Salvationists should be required to conduct themselves like Christians, and not as though they were rowdy drunken people.' This cartoon from 1883 demonstrates the bemused attitude of the general public at the time.

Subjects
Related names :

Booth, William, 1829-1912

Burnett, Matthew, 1839-

Gore, John

Hay, Alexander, 1820-1898

Saunders, Edward

Sutherland, Thomas

Salvation Army. Gawler Corps

Salvation Army. Moonta Corps

Yorke's Peninsula advertiser

Coverage year : 1883
Place : Gawler (S. Aust.); Light Square (Adelaide, S. Aust.); Moonta (S. Aust.)
Region : Barossa
Further reading :
Calder, WC. 'The Salvation Army by W.C.C.', Unsourced newspaper clipping in the Papers of WC Calder
South Australia. Parliament. Parliamentary debates South Australia (Hansard), Adelaide: Government Printer, 1857-
Stevenson, Charles. 'Boundless Salvation: the rise of the Salvation Army in South Australia', Journal of the Historical Society of South Australia,' Journal of the Historical Society of South Australia, no. 14 (1986), pp. 123-136

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