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Central Area in Salem in Marion County, Oregon — The American West (Northwest)
 

The Salvation Army

1886-1986

 
 
The Salvation Army Marker image. Click for full size.
Photographed by Douglass Halvorsen, October 14, 2025
1. The Salvation Army Marker
Inscription.
At this location Capt. Mary Stillwell began the work of the Salvation Army in Salem Dec. 28, 1886
 
Erected 1986 by The Salvation Army.
 
Topics. This historical marker is listed in these topic lists: Religion & Religious StructuresWomen. A significant historical date for this entry is December 28, 1886.
 
Location. 44° 56.345′ N, 123° 2.35′ W. Marker is in Salem, Oregon, in Marion County. It is in the Central Area. It is at the intersection of Liberty Street Southeast and Ferry Street Southeast, on the right when traveling west on Liberty Street Southeast. Touch for map. Marker is at or near this postal address: 190 Liberty St SE, Salem OR 97301, United States of America. Touch for directions.

Regionally, this marker is in Oregon Wine Country and in the Willamette Valley. It is also on the American Pacific Coast, in the Pacific Northwest, and in the Lewis & Clark Corridor. Globally, it is in North America, in the Cascade Range, on the Ring of Fire, in the Pacific Rim, in the Western Hemisphere, in the Western World, and in the Anglosphere.

Other nearby markers. At least 8 other markers are within walking distance
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of this marker: A Grand Tradition (within shouting distance of this marker); All Aboard! (about 300 feet away, measured in a direct line); First National Bank, Old/Capitol Tower Building (about 300 feet away); Gray Belle Restaurant (about 300 feet away); Adolph Block (about 400 feet away); John Hughes Company/New Salem Hotel Building (about 400 feet away); McGilchrist Building (about 400 feet away); Gray Building (about 400 feet away). Touch for a list and map of all markers in Salem.
 
Related marker. Click here for another marker that is related to this marker.
 
Also see . . .
1. Mary Stillwell (1862-1947).
Mary Stillwell established the first Salvation Army corps in Portland in 1886. Her work led to the opening of the first headquarters for the organization in the Pacific Northwest.

Mary Matthews was born to English parents in Corfu, Greece, on January 27, 1862. Her father was in the British army, and the family moved frequently, eventually settling in Canada. At the age of seventeen, she was sent to London to further her education. While living in London, she began attending Salvation Army meetings and enrolled
The Salvation Army Marker image. Click for full size.
Photographed by Douglass Halvorsen, October 14, 2025
2. The Salvation Army Marker
The marker is inlaid in the concrete sidewalk next to a streetlight, as seen in the photo.
in the Women's Training College, where Emma Booth, daughter of the organization's founder, was principal. Matthews joined the Salvation Army and became an officer, rising to the rank of captain. During her time in London, she met Henry Stillwell, who also became a Salvation Army officer, and the two began a courtship.

The Salvation Army first expanded its work to the United States in 1880, when officers landed in New York City. Henry Stillwell was sent to San Francisco to establish a corps, arriving in the city in 1883. Mary Matthews received orders to join him and the couple married soon after she arrived. Rather than a honeymoon, the newlyweds worked to open a Salvation Army corps in Oakland. By 1886, Henry Stillwell was in charge of all Salvation Army efforts in California.

In the summer of 1886, Henry Stillwell sent Mary and two female cadets to Portland to begin a corps in Oregon. She took with her the couple's ten-month-old child. The Oregonian reported on August 28, 1886, the arrival of members of the Salvation Army by boat. Touring East Portland, Stillwell found “saloons lining every inch of Union Avenue, filled with rough
The Salvation Army site image. Click for full size.
Photographed by Douglass Halvorsen, October 14, 2025
3. The Salvation Army site
A backdrop view of the northeast corner of Liberty and Ferry Streets, where the beginnings of the Salvation Army in Salem began on December 28, 1886.
characters who wanted nothing to do with salvation.”

On October 3, Captain Mary Stilwell held a Salvation Army outdoor service at the corner of Southwest Fifth Avenue and Burnside Street in Portland. In a week’s time, she rented an old frame building on Burnside, between Fourth and Fifth Avenues, and established the first Salvation Army corps in the Pacific Northwest.

Recounting her memories of the early days of the Salvation Army in Portland, Stillwell told the Oregonian in 1935: “In those days our main trouble was not lack of money so much as persecution by the hoodlum element. Drunken men from the saloons—I think they were sometimes paid—would interrupt the meetings, and we had no police co-operation. The press was not very friendly, in fact one might say that the pulpit, the press and the police were all against us.”

In December 1886, she established a corps in Salem. Henry Stillwell joined his wife in Portland in early 1887. He was promoted to major and became the head of the Oregon-Washington Division. The Stillwells went on to open corps in Oregon City and Tacoma, Washington.

Henry Stillwell died in March 1905. Mary
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Stillwell raised the couple’s eight children on her own, four of whom became Salvationists. In the spring of 1905, she was chosen as the organization’s secretary for Women’s Social Work, a position she held for seventeen years. Responsible for overseeing work at rescue and maternity homes between Chicago and Honolulu, she frequently traveled to the West Coast. She visited Portland annually until 1922 as part of her responsibilities as secretary. She visited the city once more in 1935 as a guest speaker, having previously retired as a colonel in the Salvation Army.

Mary Stillwell died on June 28, 1947, in Atlanta, Georgia.
(Submitted on October 20, 2025, by Douglass Halvorsen of Klamath Falls, Oregon.) 

2. Salem’s Salvation Army Corps.
“The Oregon Statesman newspaper’s December 24, 1886 issue, it was reported that, “The Salvation Army commenced holding services after the 28th of December” so it would appear that the work was officially started before January of 1887. This early presence makes the Salem Salvation Army Corps one of the earliest chapters in U.S. history.”

The history of The Salvation Army in Salem, Oregon, began in London’s dark East End when William Booth hurried home to tell his wife, “Catherine, I have found my destiny!” Realizing the urgent need to reach many of the unchurched, heavily-burdened, and poverty-stricken residents of that area, William and Catherine Booth, first formed the Christian Mission, which in 1865 became known as The Salvation Army.

It took just 15 short, but very busy, years for The Salvation Army to cross the Atlantic and reach New York when, officially, Commissioner George Railton and his seven “Hallelujah Lassies” arrived and began the work in New York City. Six years later, the work taken up by Captains Henry and Mary Stillwell, began in Portland and moved southward to Salem.

The Oregon Statesman dated January 7, 1887, gives a review of the year of 1886 in which it was stated, “December 20, 1886 Vanguard of the Salvation Army ‘strike the town.'” On page 8 of the Oregon Statesman newspaper’s De-cember 24, 1886 issue, it was reported that, “The Salvation Army commenced holding services after the 28th of December” so it would appear that the work was officially started before January of 1887. This early presence makes the Salem Salvation Army Corps one of the earliest chapters in U.S. history.

A record of the early Salvation Army outdoor meetings, known as Open-Air meetings, is implanted in the sidewalk in the northeast corner of Liberty and Ferry Streets. Since those early days, The Salvation Army in Salem has been active in trying to develop its ministry of worship and service throughout Marion County.

Over the intervening years–117 of them–The Salvation Army has been seen in many different forms and in many places throughout the area.

The Salvation Army Corps has contributed much to the Salem community in its 117 year history.
(Submitted on October 20, 2025, by Douglass Halvorsen of Klamath Falls, Oregon.) 
 
 
Credits. This page was last revised on October 20, 2025. It was originally submitted on October 20, 2025, by Douglass Halvorsen of Klamath Falls, Oregon. This page has been viewed 78 times since then and 40 times this year. Photos:   1, 2, 3. submitted on October 20, 2025, by Douglass Halvorsen of Klamath Falls, Oregon. • Devry Becker Jones was the editor who published this page.
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Jul. 5, 2026