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Theodore Kitching

The Right Honourable Commissioner
Theodore Kitching
CBE
Theodore-kitching.jpg
Personal details
Born (1866-12-29)29 December 1866
Ackworth, Yorkshire
Died 10 February 1930(1930-02-10) (aged 63)
Paris, France

Commissioner Theodore Hopkins Kitching CBE (29 December 1866 – 10 February 1930) was a prominent officer in The Salvation Army, acting as Secretary and confidant to Generals William Booth and Bramwell Booth, and was The Salvation Army's International Secretary for Europe from 1914 to 1916.

Born in Ackworth in Yorkshire, the third of eleven children born to school teachers William Kitching and his wife Louisa (née Wilmot), Theodore Kitching was originally a school teacher and a Quaker. He joined The Salvation Army in 1882 aged 16 at a meeting in Bristol, England, and became a Salvation Army officer in 1888, serving in Britain, France, Switzerland, and Belgium. He was Secretary to William Booth, the Founder and first General of The Salvation Army, from 1909 to 1912, Secretary to General Bramwell Booth from 1912 to 1914, and was the Salvation Army's International Secretary for Europe from 1914 to 1916, Salvation Army Editor-in-Chief 1921 to 1929, and head of The Salvation Army Literary Department and Translations Bureau. In addition, Kitching was a close confidant of both William Booth and his son Bramwell.

Kitching accompanied General William Booth on his last tour of the United States in 1907, when they were both filmed working in an "office" - actually a set in an open-air studio. He wrote numerous hymns including How Wonderful It Is to Walk with God Kitching was appointed a Companion of the British Empire (CBE) in 1920.


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