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Frederick Booth-Tucker : ウィキペディア英語版 | Frederick Booth-Tucker
Commissioner Frederick St. George de Lautour Booth-Tucker, (March 21, 1853 – July 17, 1929) was a senior Salvation Army officer of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, and the son in law of General William Booth, the Army's Founder. ==Early life== Born in Monghyr in India, the son of William Thornhill Tucker, a Deputy Commissioner in the Indian Civil Service and author of an English-Persian dictionary, 'Fred' Tucker was five years old when the Indian Mutiny broke out. He was educated at Cheltenham College from 1866 until 1873, leaving when he was 20 years old. During his time at the college he was known as a keen scholar and athlete.〔Mackenzie, F.A ''Booth-Tucker Sadhu and Saint'' Hodder and Stoughton (1930) pg 14〕 He joined the Indian Civil Service as an Assistant Commissioner in 1874, being posted to Amritsar, Simla and later to Dharamsala, where in addition to being Assistant Commissioner he was also Assistant Magistrate.〔Mackenzie, pg 36〕 In 1875 he was converted during the Moody and Sankey campaigns in London.〔(Frederick St George de Lautour (Booth) Tucker ), Salvation Army website, accessed May 2010〕 He married Louisa Mary Bode, eighteen years his senior, in 1877 at Amritsar in India, she having travelled out from her home on the Isle of Wight to join him.〔Gerald H. Anderson, (''Biographical Dictionary of Christian Missions'' ) p. 79 ISBN 0-8028-4680-7〕
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