In Darkest England and the Way Out
William Booth
Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022)
William Booth (1829 – 1912) was the founding General of the Salvation Army in late nineteenth century England. Finding his salvation as a teenager, he went on to become one of the most controversial and, ultimately, well-loved and respected social reformers of his day. Published in 1890 amidst the turmoil of the death of his beloved wife, Catherine, “In Darkest England” was hailed as a revolutionary approach to coping with the social ills facing Great Britain at the time. Although 130 years old, this revolutionary book of Victorian England still has much to say of note today. - Summary by Tom Hirsch (15 hr 32 min)
Chapters
Preface | 12:25 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
Why Darkest England | 27:33 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
The Submerged Tenth | 21:23 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
The Homeless | 27:19 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
The Out-of-Works | 24:15 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
On The Verge of the Abyss | 18:52 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
The Vicious | 33:33 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
The Criminals | 15:55 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
The Children of the Lost | 14:41 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
Is There No Help? - Part 1 | 24:15 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
Is There No Help? - Part 2 | 23:20 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
Deliverance - Part 1 | 25:04 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
Deliverance - Part 2 | 5:04 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
To the Rescue! - The City Colony - Part 1 | 20:44 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
To the Rescue! - The City Colony - Part 2 | 17:22 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
Work for the Out-of-Works - The Factory | 18:43 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
The Regimentation of the Unemployed | 8:16 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
The Household Salvage Brigade | 29:14 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
To the Country! The Farm Colony | 32:57 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
The Industrial Village | 14:33 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
Agricultural Villages | 4:48 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
New Britain - The Colony Over-Sea | 18:51 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
Universal Emigration | 12:53 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
More Crusades - Part 1 | 21:50 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
More Crusades - Part 2 | 21:49 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
The Traveling Hospital | 30:45 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
Effectual Deliverance for the Drunkard | 27:24 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
The New Way of Escape for Lost Women | 13:07 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
A Preventive Home for Unfallen Girls When in Danger | 26:43 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
Refuges for the Children of the Streets | 14:30 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
Assistance in General | 14:26 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
The Poor Man's Bank | 16:17 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
The Poor Man's Lawyer | 29:42 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
Our Intelligence Department | 18:39 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
A Matrimonial Bureau | 20:56 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
Can It Be Done, and How? | 14:53 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
How Much Will It Cost? | 18:51 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
Some Advantages Stated | 18:40 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
Some Objections Met | 37:29 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
Recapitulation | 21:50 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
A Practical Conclusion | 27:48 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
Appendix - Part 1 | 10:06 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
Appendix - Part 2 | 17:59 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
Appendix - Part 3 | 12:32 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
Appendix - Part 4 | 14:49 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
Appendix - Part 5 | 24:52 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
Appendix - Part 6 | 4:44 | Read by Tom Hirsch (1947-2022) |
Reviews
Vicki
It is late November and the Salvation Army’s bell ringers will be outside many retail stores around my area. I’ve always thought of The Salvation Army as a charity organization. Locally they provide a small food bank , heating assistance, and a secondhand retail store. In my own childhood, they helped my mother when in her mid-30s she suddenly became a widow. The Salvation Army has long been my charity of choice. I knew nothing of its history. I am appreciative of LibriVox and the reader is excellent. William and Catherine Booth definitely deserve their place in social service history. He had many,many ideas to alleviate poverty in England. Some of those ideas still exist. The organization had and still has a Christian orientation. Mr. Booth’s acceptance of people outside that religion was commendable. Having read many books of historical fiction set in the Victorian era, I lean toward stories of the upper class. Downton Abbey was a hit for me .Charles Dickens was an exception but he was required reading in school. Who can forget Tiny Tim? While listening to this book I was made more aware of the poverty of the period.I could only listen to a few chapters at a time, because of the lives of the poor and destitute of The Empire of that day. Humbling.