James Dowdle

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Commissioner James Dowdle

James John Dowdle (20 December 184021 July 1900) was a Commissioner in the Salvation Army known as the "Fiery Fiddler" and the "Saved Railway Guard".[1] He was the first Salvation Army Commissioner to be Promoted to Glory.[2][3][4]

Dowdle was born in a two-room cottage in Upton Lovell in Wiltshire in 1840,[5] the youngest of two children of woollen factory worker Priscilla née Hinton (1820-1898) and Henry Dowdle (1815-1868), an agricultural labourer. A big and mischievous youth who "loved a scrap",[5] he left school aged 12 to train as a wheelwright under an uncle, but did not find the work to his taste. He next tried farm work, but found he liked that even less, so he moved to London where he worked in a goods yard for the Great Western Railway, then in 1861 as a porter before quickly working his way up to guard.[2]

Illustration of the Whitechapel Mission Hall, previously 'The Eastern Star' (1867)

Dowdle found employment as a labourer with a builder and evangelist named Stevens, and when the two were called to do some work at the former public house 'The Eastern Star' in Whitechapel, intended to be the headquarters of the newly-formed The Christian Mission, Dowdle first encountered William Booth, its founder and General Superintendent. Dowdle was an early convert to the Christian Mission, joining the following Sunday after hearing Booth preach. In 1866 Dowdle was a member of the Paddington corps[1] and later that year he became the Mission's first full-time paid evangelist when it extended its ministry outside the East End of London for the first time[6] with his appointment to run the Corps in Poplar in London.[4]

The Salvation Army

Later years

References

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