Congress Hall of the Salvation Army
Please note that this text is an extract from a reference work written in 1990. As a result, some of the content may not reflect recent research, changes and events.
c) SALVATION ARMY: The nearby Congress Hall of the Salvation Army in Park Crescent Terrace was completed in 1883, and was formally opened in March 1884 by Mrs Booth, the wife of the founder of the movement. Designed by E.J.Hamilton, it is a large, brick building with two flanking battlemented towers and a little terracotta decoration; it seats 1,400 people and has additions of 1925.
The army’s first branch in the area was established in about 1880 at Conway Street , Hove, after General Booth’s first visit in 1879. In 1891 the Salvation Army bought a former riding school in Edward Street (where the D.S.S. building, Windsor House, now stands) and established a second citadel with battlemented towers, but it was demolished in 1965 and a replacement building now stands in Carlton Hill . A goodwill centre was run in Moulsecoomb Way from the late 1930s, but an Allen West factory was built on the site in the mid ’50s. There is also a Salvation Army hall at Leybourne Road, Bevendean.
During the 1880s and ’90s the Salvation Army came under severe attack in Brighton as elsewhere, and police escorts were required for their marches. The windows of the Congress Hall were also smashed. {2,24,62,83,115}
Any numerical cross-references in the text above refer to resources in the Sources and Bibliography section of the Encyclopaedia of Brighton by Tim Carder.
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The Salvation Army Hall at moulsecoome Brighton was open to at least 1980s . My parents and brigadier Parsons used to run it.
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