Poverty is hell. Indifference to it is a crime against
humanity. William Booth, founder of the Salvation Army, understood this. Born
in Nottingham in 1829, Booth knew as well the Dickensian squalor of Britain's
inner cities.
Triggered by the rapid growth of industrialisation, tens of
thousands flocked to the factories, the mines and the tenements, overloading
the already centuries old support systems that were hardly existent in any
event. The rigid class system served only to condemn the poor even more
irrevocably to their station where they lived in humiliation and degradation.
William Booth became a Christian in his youth and spent what
little time he had from his job at a pawn shop helping the poor, the sick, the
hopeless. He encouraged the destitute to look to God for solace in the
churches. He was indeed convincing. The poor, however, soon rediscovered what
they have always known: there was no real place for them amongst the
sweet-smelling, elegantly dressed Sunday church goers. William founded the East
London Christian Mission. It worked, but hardly. William, his son Bromwell and
their friend George Railton, dedicated to their cause, were eventually inspired
by the concept of "The Christian Mission is a Volunteer Army".
At the time, Victorian England, Imperial England, was
defined by its armies that had carved out for her a huge and far-flung empire.
This army was largely comprised of volunteers. This inspired William Booth and
his small circle of helpers. It also drew some mockery - being called a "Volunteer
Army" to help the poor! In a moment of inspiration, Booth crossed out the
word "Volunteer" and wrote "Salvation" instead. Thus, the
Salvation Army was born.
The rapid development of the first Salvationists was in
truth aided by the adoption of a quasi-military structure. An army in the
service of God, dedicated to help those in need, had declared war against
poverty and hopelessness. Booth's work drew opposition and sometimes even
brutal persecution. Those with vested interest in living off the misery of the
poor - the barkeepers and the brothel masters for example - were angered when
their former customers were converted to William Booth's army. A Methodist, he
was eventually ordained a minister, with a difference: his was a open air
church; he took his ministry to the streets of London and to the country roads.
Space does not permit as to describe the now forgotten story of the hell seen
by Booth, his wife and family, and their small circle of supporters. To say the
least, it was bloody and terrifying. "The Army" produced in those
days several martyrs. Notwithstanding, the idea of an army fighting sin caught
on and spread across the Empire, in fact the world.
General William Booth dispatched Brigadier Thomas Gale to
the colony of Trinidad and Tobago, where crime and poverty held a large section
of the population in an awful grip. A veteran of the Jamaican wars against
ignorance and indigence, Gale arrived in Trinidad in July 1901, ready to open
fire. Realising that this would be an uphill battle, he called for reserves,
these arriving under the command of Captain Luther Atkins. "By September
of that year, the newly invaded island had several promising converts"
writes Doreen Hobbs in her little Book "Jewels of the Caribbean".
There was real resistance to the work.
One young volunteer, Lieutenant Lilian Bailey, was knocked down
and had to be hospitalised!
The Port of Spain Central Corps became to be known as
"Number 1". A member, Brother Whistle, was over 100 years old in
1917, and could remember the days of slavery. The first person to wear the
Salvation Army's uniform was the wife of Corps Treasurer Abraham Busby. In
1903, the sailors' home on Queen Street was opened, and seamen, shore labourers
and sailors enjoyed its hospitality. "In one year alone, 7,581 meals were
supplied and 10,807 men slept at the home," writes Hobbs. In 1913,
Trinidad's Governor, Sir George Le Hunte, visited the sailors' home, and must
have been duly impressed: in a successive session of the Legislative Council,
£520 were granted to the Salvation Army towards a new home for soldiers and
sailors.
In the legendary escape from Devil's Island in French Guiana
in 1930, 200 men were taken into the care of the Salvation Army and nursed back
to strength. But it was not the end of their journey: they were just placed in
groups on safer vessels, and with 10 days' rations on board were tugged back
out into international waters and left to their own devices to find refuge
somewhere else! One of the fugitives was René Belbenoît, who in his
much-acclaimed books about Devil's Island "Dry Guillotine" and
"Hell on Trial" wrote about his Salvation Army experience in
Trinidad.
In 1908, a central hall was opened in Port of Spain by the
then Governor, the Hon. Adam Smith. Number 3 in Belmont also got accommodations.
Number 2 Corps was located in Tragarete Road. Colour Sergeant Goring
distinguished himself as an enthusiastic leader of the open-air brigade in
those early years. Other significant names of the first decade of the 20th
century at Tragarete Road were Corps Secretary H.O. Thomas and Corps Treasurer
Henry Lewis. It was only half a century later, in 1955, that Tragarete Road
received a new hall and quarters.
Another long-standing local officer of "Number 1"
was Corps Sergeant-Major Ralph Hoyte, who had come from Barbados. He got
married to Martha Gibbs and raised five children in the Salvation Army ethos.
In 1907, the Tunapuna Corps was launched. General Frederick
Coutts cut the ribbon personally 59 years later, in 1966, and Brigadier Edna
Burgess opened the Army hall in Tunapuna.
The early years of the Salvation Army in Tobago were first
recorded in 1909, but it is possible that a Corps was established there before
that year. But it was not until 30 years later, in 1939, that the Tobago
representative on the Legislative Council, the Hon. George de Nobriga, opened a
brand new hall for the Corps in Scarborough. "Now, as the steamer from
Trinidad drops anchor in Scarborough Bay, one of the first sights that meets
the eye is a pleasing two-store y building right on the sea-front bearing
the Salvation Army sign." (The War Cry, June 1939, as quoted by Hobbs).
Serving in the Salvation Army in Tobago in the formative years were Brigadier Edward
J. Bax, Lieut.-Colonel Gordon Simpson, Captain Shepherd, Captain Skeete and
Lieutenant Davis, to name but a few.
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