The following year she went on another motorcade from Land's End to John O’Groats, and visited Canada, the United States and France, though by this time she was over seventy years old.
It was originally built about 1870, and extensively remodeled and enlarged after acquired by Evangeline Booth (1865-1950) in 1919.
In 1961 he published the controversial Four Bonnets to Golgotha, a book about four members of the Booth family: Catherine, Florence, Evangeline Booth and Catherine Bramwell-Booth.
General Evangeline Booth (1934–1939) and General Eva Burrows (1986–1993) were the two previous female Generals of The Salvation Army.
John Wilkes Booth | Edwin Booth | Tim Booth | Booth Tarkington | Junius Brutus Booth | Evangeline Lilly | Shirley Booth | Booth Newspapers | Seeley Booth | Marilyn Booth | Hubert Cecil Booth | Evangeline Booth | Booth newspapers | The Booth at the End | Sherman Booth | Mojave phone booth | Mary Louise Booth | Kristin Booth | Kevin Booth | George Sclater-Booth, 1st Baron Basing | George Sclater-Booth | George Gough Booth | Evangeline Parish, Louisiana | Evangeline Parish | David G. Booth | Connie Booth | Charles Booth (philanthropist) | Charles Booth | Bramwell Booth | Booth baronets |