band before a performance at the
Rose Bowl Parade, in California, 1926. The early Salvationists, as today, took their Gospel message to the people in their own environments, largely in the streets and markets of the towns. In 1878 Charles Fry and his three sons formed a brass quartet which played during outdoor meetings. The Army's founder,
William Booth, came to hear of them, and started to use them in his own campaign. Over time the Fry ensemble was augmented with other instruments, not exclusively brass, and became famous under names such as "The Hallelujah Minstrels" and "The Happy Band". The Fry family themselves very soon gave up their family business and joined the Salvation Army full-time. The first ever Salvation Army Corps Band was formed in December 1879 in
Consett,
County Durham, a former steelworking town, another followed later in
Northwich,
Cheshire in 1880. It was not long before the Army fully adopted the use of music in its work, and the Salvation Army Headquarters eventually established the
International Staff Band, its flagship ensemble, in 1891. Gradually the bands developed into the same basic format as the
traditional amateur brass band and a rich repertoire of music was adapted, arranged and composed for the Salvation Army specifically. Many of the leading brass band
composers and players of the 20th century had roots in or close links with the Salvation Army. ==Influences on secular brass bands==