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Maud Ballington Booth

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Name
  
Maud Booth

Role
  
Novelist


Siblings
  
Florence L. Barclay

Maud Ballington Booth Washington DC Extra Mile Ballington and Maud Booth

Died
  
August 26, 1948, Great Neck

Spouse
  
Books
  
A Rector's Daughter in Victorian England: Memories of a Childhood and Girlhood, Beneath two flags

Similar People
  
Ballington Booth, William Booth, Florence L Barclay

Organizations founded
  

Maud Elizabeth Charlesworth (September 13, 1865 – August 26, 1948) later changed her name to Maud Ballington Booth, was a Salvation Army leader and co-founder of the Volunteers of America.

Maud Ballington Booth Accounts of Maud39s life

She was born in Limpsfield, near Oxted, Surrey, England, the daughter of the local Anglican rector. One of three girls, she was a sister to bestselling romance novelist, Florence L. Barclay. When she was four, her father, Rev. Samuel Charlesworth, moved his family to Limehouse in London. The work of both her parents there in social issues led to Maud’s interest for social welfare and social service. In 1882, she became a companion of Miss Catherine Booth in organizing a branch of the Salvation Army in Paris. In 1883, they went to Geneva, Switzerland, where they were both expelled after aggressive police interrogation. She stayed with the Booth family and worked in the London slums and elsewhere until her marriage to the second son of the founder of the Salvation Army, Ballington Booth in 1886, against her father's wishes.

Maud Ballington Booth Susan Fulton Welty on Maud Ballington Booth

In 1896, Ballington and Maud left the Salvation Army after a dispute with General Booth, to co-found the Volunteers of America. Maud was also known for working to improve the conditions of prisons in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. She later toured on the Chautauqua circuit, moving audiences with her vivid account of life in prisons and calls for reform. Her publications include:

  • Branded (1897)
  • Lights of Child-Land (1902)
  • After Prison —What? (1903)
  • Twilight Fairy Tales (1906)
  • Among the other causes she embraced was the legalization of euthanasia.

    References

    Maud Ballington Booth Wikipedia