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THE HISTORY OF THE WILMINGTON PREAMBLE |
From: "Lash, William (Bill)"
The Wilmington Preamble has long been surrounded by controversy and discussion
of such has sparked many a debate almost from its inception in the early years
of Alcoholics Anonymous. The history of our fellowship has mostly been passed
from member to member over the expanse of many years; member whose very disease
has a tendency to distort one’s memory. Inaccuracies may prevail. The
following is in no way an attempt to dispel those controversies, but an effort
to establish an accurate history of the birth of the Wilmington Preamble and to
keep it’s true history alive for the enlightenment of future generations.
Documentable corrections are welcomed.
The Wilmington Preamble’s birth ties in with one of Wilmington’s earliest
members, Shoes L. Shoes joined the Wilmington Group and got sober in May of
1944. The following month in June, Shoes was Chairman of the group and in
charge
of getting speakers for their meetings. There was at this time a sportswriter
in town covering the horse races at Delaware Park. His name was Mickey M. and
Shoes asked him to speak at the group’s meeting. Mickey replied that he wasn’t
much of a speaker but that he would write something appropriate. He reportedly
went back to his room at the Hotel Dupont and wrote the Wilmington Preamble as
we know it and it was read the following Friday night.
Being a sportswriter, Mickey M. covered events in other towns, and while in
Baltimore covering the races at Pimlico gave the same preamble to the Baltimore
Group which they also adopted as their own. Where it was actually read first is
the subject of many debates but one fact remains clear, that this “Preamble” was
widely accepted in Maryland and Delaware long before World Service sanctioned
the shorter A.A. Preamble that is more universally accepted today.
THE WILMINGTON AA PREAMBLE
We of Alcoholics Anonymous are a group of persons for whom alcohol has become a
major problem. We have banded together in a sincere effort to help ourselves
and other problem drinkers recover health and maintain sobriety.
Definitions of alcoholics are many and varied. For brevity we think of an
alcoholic as one whose life has become unmanageable to any degree due to the use
of alcohol.
We believe that the alcoholic is suffering from a disease for which no cure has
yet been found. We profess no curative powers but have formulated a plan to
arrest alcoholism.
>From the vast experience of our many members we have learned that successful
membership demands total abstinence. Attempts at controlled drinking by the
alcoholic inevitably fail.
Membership requirements demand only a sincere desire on the part of the
applicant to maintain total abstinence.
There are no dues of fees in A.A.; no salaried officers. Money necessary for
operating expenses is secured by voluntary contributions.
Alcoholics Anonymous does not perform miracles, believing that such powers rests
only in God.
We adhere to no particular creed or religion. We do believe, however, that an
appeal for help to one’s own interpretation of a higher power, or God, is
indispensable to a satisfactory adjustment to life’s problems.
Alcoholics Anonymous is not a prohibition or temperance movement in any sense of
the word. We have no criticism of the controlled drinker. We are concerned
only with the alcoholic.
We attempt to follow a program of recovery which has for its chief objectives:
Sobriety for ourselves; help for other alcoholics who desire it; amends for past
wrongs; humility; honesty; tolerance; and spiritual growth.
We welcome and appreciate the cooperation of the medical profession and the help
of the clergy.
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