In 1881, General William Booth appointed Bramwell as his
Chief of the Staff of The Salvation Army. Bramwell would hold this title until his father's death, when he himself was named General in his father's
will. In 1885 Bramwell was involved with
William Thomas Stead in an attempt to publicise the
prostitution of young girls. The lurid revelations of how thirteen-year-old
Eliza Armstrong was sold for £5 resulted in the
1885 Criminal Law Amendment Act, which raised the
age of consent to sixteen years. After the revelations, Booth, Stead, and
Rebecca Jarrett, a converted brothel-keeper who assisted them, were arrested on several charges. Booth was acquitted but the others served short prison terms. On 12 October 1882 Bramwell married Captain
Florence Eleanor Soper, the eldest daughter of Dr Soper, a medical practitioner of
Blaina,
Monmouthshire. The congregation at Clapton Congress Hall were charged one
shilling each for admission to the ceremony. She had joined The Salvation Army in 1880 and worked in France with Bramwell's sister
Catherine Booth. After her marriage she took charge of the women's social work. All of their seven children (five daughters and two sons) became active workers in the army. Their eldest child was
Commissioner Catherine Bramwell-Booth. ==General of The Salvation Army==