|
AA TIMELINE |
SOURCE REFERENCES
Page
numbers may differ in the hard vs. soft cover versions of the references
cited below.
AABB Alcoholics Anonymous, the Big Book, AAWS
AACOA AA Comes of Age, AAWS
BW-RT Bill W. by Robert Thompson (soft cover)
BW-FH Bill W. by Francis Hartigan (hard cover)
BW-40 Bill W. My first 40 Years, autobiography (hard
cover)
CBC Charlie B’s Sobriety Calendar reference.
CH Children of the Healer, Bob Smith & Sue Smith
Windows by Christine Brewer (soft cover)
DBGO Dr. Bob and the Good Old-timers, AAWS
EBBY Ebby The Man Who Sponsored Bill W. by Mel B. (soft
cover)
GTBT Grateful to Have Been There by Nell Wing (soft
cover)
GSC Advisory Actions of the General Service Conference,
AAWS
GSO Presentation and/or literature from the General Service
Office in NY
LOH The Language of the Heart, AA Grapevine Inc.
LR Lois Remembers by Lois Wilson
MSBW My Search for Bill W. by Mel B. (soft cover)
NG Not God by Ernest Kurtz (soft cover)
NW New Wine by Mel B. (soft cover)
PIO Pass It On, AAWS
RAA The Roots of Alcoholics Anonymous by Bill
Pittman, nee AA the Way It Began (soft cover)
SI Sister Ignatia by Mary C. Darrah (soft cover)
SM AA Service Manual and Twelve Concepts for World
Service, AAWS
WWW Data obtained from internet sources
Page numbers follow
the source reference:
PIO 111+113 = Pass It
On pages 111 and 113
PIO
170-175 = Pass It On pages 170 thru 175
This timeline is a an
expansion of a chronology done
Formatted by Arthur
S.
1907
Bill’s parents divorced.
Spring,
Dr. Bob left the Univ. of Michigan to take a 1-month “geographic cure” on a
large farm owned by a friend. (AABB 173, DBGO 26)
Fall,
Dr. Bob was forced to leave the Univ. of Michigan because of his drinking. He
transferred, as a junior, to Rush Univ. near Chicago. While at Rush Univ. his
drinking became so bad his fraternity brothers called for his father. (AABB
173-174, CH 2, DBGO 26, NG 30, PIO 25)
Late
summer, Bill's grandfather, Fayette, challenged Bill saying "nobody but an
Australian bushman knows how to make and throw a boomerang.” (AACOA 53, PIO
29-30, LR 19-20, BW-RT 28-29, BW-40 21-23, NG 11)
1908
July, Frank Buchman arrived in England
to attend the Keswick Convention of evangelicals. After hearing a sermon by a
woman evangelist, Jessie Penn-Lewis, Buchman experienced a profound surrender.
He helped another attendee to go through the same experience. His experiences
became the key to the rest of Buchman’s life and work. Returning to the U.S., he
started what he called his “laboratory years” working out the principles he was
to apply on a global scale. (NG 9, RAA 141, NW 32-45)
Feb.,
Bill, about age 11 or 12, made the boomerang and perceived himself as a “Number
One Man.” (BW-RT 33-35) After Bill made the boomerang, his grandfather, Fayette,
gave him his Uncle Clarence’s violin and challenged him to learn how to play it.
(AACOA 53, BW-RT 36-37, LR 20, BW40 25-28)
Spring/early summer, Bill met his closest friend, Mark Whalon who was 10 years
his senior. (BW-RT 40, RAA 141, BW-FH 12)
1909
Late spring, Bill’s grandparents
decided to send him (at age 14) to the prestigious Burr and Burton Seminary in
Manchester, VT for his secondary education. Bill started classes that fall and
boarded at the school for 5 days a week and returned home, by train, to East
Dorset, on weekends. (PIO 33, NG 12, BW-FH 19, BW-RT 48)
Akron
Rubber Mold and Machines Company founded in Akron, OH. Later In 1928, it was
reorganized into the Akron Rubber Machinery Company. In 1935 it was at the
center of a proxy fight that brought Bill W. to Akron, OH. (BW-RT 211-212, CH 4,
NG 26, PIO 134, RAA 142)
1910
Dr. Bob received his medical degree, at age 31, from Rush Univ. He also
received a highly coveted 2 year internship at City Hospital in Akron, OH. (CH
2, DBGO 27, NG 30,)
1910
Dr Bob started internship at City
Hospital. For 2 years he had no problem with drinking. (GBGO 27)
1911
Ebby T. and Bill first met. They were
classmates at Burr and Burton Seminary for 1 year (PIO 34)
1912
Dr. Bob, age 33, started medical
practice at the 2nd National Bank Bldg in Akron. He remained there
until he retired from practice in 1948. (DBGO 28)
Lois
Burnham graduated from Packer Collegiate Institute, an exclusive girl’s school,
in Brooklyn, NY. (DBGO 28+348, LR 12, PIO 40, BW-FH 13)
Sept.,
at the beginning of the school year at Burr and Burton, Bill was president of
the senior class, a star football player, a star pitcher and captain of the
baseball team and 1st violin in the school orchestra. (BW-FH 19)
Nov.
18, Bill's "first love", Bertha Bamford, died from hemorrhaging after surgery at
the Flower Hospital in NYC. She was a schoolmate and daughter of the rector of
Manchester’s Zion Episcopal Church. Bill learned about it at school on the 19th
and began a 3 year episode of depression which greatly affected his performance
at school and home. (AACOA 54, PIO 35-36, BW-RT 51-58, NG 12, BW-FH 19-20)
1913
Jan., Bill failed his mid-year exams at Burr and Burton in almost every
subject and was forced to drop out of school. (BW-RT 58, BW-FH 19-20)
Apr.,
it became clear that Bill could not graduate from Burr and Burton and it was
decided that he move to Boston to live with his mother Emily. (BW-RT-58)
Summer,
Bill’s grandfather took him to PA for the 50th anniversary of the
Civil War Battle of Gettysburg. (PIO 38-39)
Summer,
Bill and Lois Burnham spend some time together while she vacationed with her
family at Emerald Lake (a few miles from Bill’s home in East Dorset, VT). Lois
was 4 ½ years older than Bill and wasn’t especially interested in him at that
time. Bill, his sister Dorothy and mother Emily were also camping at the Lake.
(BW-RT 68, PIO 38-39, LR 13+15) Lois and Bill met through her brother Rogers.
(PIO 48, BW-FH 23-24)
Late
summer, after an absence of several months, Bill returned to Burr and Burton and
took the senior examinations. He failed his German class and was told that he
would not receive his diploma. Bill’s mother was furious and argued with the
principal about it but the principal would not budge. Bill went to live with his
mother and sister in Arlington, MA, a suburb of Boston, where he made up his
German course. (BW-FH 20, BW-RT 65)
Fall,
Bill attended Arlington High School to prepare for examinations for MIT. He was
essentially repeating his senior year. His mother Emily decided that Bill should
become an engineer and attend Massachusetts Institute of Technology. (BW-FH
2-21)
1914
Early, Dr. Bob (previously hospitalized at least a dozen times due to his
drinking) was unable to get sober. His father sent a physician from St.
Johnsbury to bring Dr. Bob home to VT where he stayed for about 4 months before
returning to Akron. Bob did not touch a drink again until 5 years later when
“the country went dry.” (1919). (AABB 174-175, DBGO 28-29, NG 30)
Bill
could not pass the entrance exams for MIT so instead he enrolled at Norwich
Univ., a military college in Northfield, VT. (BW-RT 65, BW-FH 20-21)
Summer,
The relationship between Bill and Lois changed into a romance. They picnicked,
hiked and took all-day drives together. (PIO 39)
July/Aug., World War I (the Great War) started in Europe and Russia. (www)
Aug.,
Bill went to British Columbia to visit his father Gilman (their first meeting in
9 years). Bill also met Christine Bock whom Gilman planned to marry. (PIO 42,
BW-RT 65-66)
Fall,
19 year old Bill, entered Norwich Univ. The military college was considered
second only to West Point in the quality and discipline of its military
training. Total enrollment was 145 students. Bill was miserable at Norwich (PIO
40-42, LR 16, BW-RT 61, BW-FH 21)
1915
Jan. 25, after a 17 year courtship, Dr.
Bob and Anne Robinson Ripley married in Chicago, IL. They took up residence at
855 Ardmore Ave., Akron, OH. (CH 2, DBGO 29)
T.
Henry Williams came to Akron to work as Chief Engineer for the National Rubber
Machinery Co. (PIO 145)
Early,
at the beginning of his 2nd semester at Norwich, Bill fell and hurt
his elbow and insisted on being treated by his mother. He was sent to Boston but
Emily did not receive him well and immediately sent him back to Norwich. Bill
had panic attacks that he perceived as heart attacks. Every attempt to perform
physical exercise caused him to be taken to the college infirmary. After several
weeks of being unable to find anything wrong, the doctors sent Bill home. This
time he went to his grandparents in East Dorset, VT (BW-FH 21-22
Spring,
Bill’s condition worsened in East Dorset but the doctors could find nothing
physically wrong. He spent much of the early spring in bed complaining of
“sinking spells.” (BW-FH 22)
Spring
(?), Bill’s grandfather, Fayette, motivated Bill with the prospect of opening an
agency to sell automobiles. Bill’s depression lifted and he began trying to
interest people in buying automobiles. He wrote to his mother that he nearly
sold an automobile to the Bamfords (the parents of his lost love). (BW-FH 23)
Summer,
Bill sold kerosene burners and played fiddle at dances, weddings and other
affairs. Romance blossomed between him and Lois. (PIO 48, BW-FH 23-24)
Sept
11, Bill and Lois became secretly engaged. (PIO 49, LR 1, BW-RT 79, BW-40 35)
Fall,
Bill re-enters Norwich Univ. in a different frame of mind. He discovered a
talent for leading his fellow cadets but his poor academic performance
continued. Bill was also noted as being much better at giving orders than
obeying them. The Commandant wanted to put Bill out of the school but the
school’s musical director interceded. (BWFH 24-25)
1916
Feb., Bill (an onlooker and still a
freshman) and his sophomore classmates were suspended for a full term from
Norwich University for a serious hazing incident which started a fight between
the freshman and sophomore classes. (PIO 49, BW-RT 87)
June,
the Norwich Cadets, as part of the VT National Guard, were called up to respond
to the Mexican border troubles fomented by Pancho Villa. This caused Bill and
his classmates to be reinstated in Norwich. The cadets were sent to Fort Ethan
Allen for mobilization. They returned to Norwich in a matter of weeks. (PIO 49,
BW-RT 88-89)
Bill’s
half sister, Helen, was born to Bill’s father Gilman and his 2nd wife
Christine. (PIO 80)
1917
Jan., Lois moved to Short Hills, NJ to
teach in a small private school her Aunt Marian started in her home. (LR 12)
Apr. 6,
the U.S. declared war on Germany and entered World War I. (www)
May,
Bill departed for officer’s training at Plattsburg, NY. After 8 weeks artillery
training at Fort Monroe, VA he was commissioned, at age 21, a 2nd
Lieutenant in the 66th Artillery Corps. He was then sent to Ft.
Rodman outside of New Bedford, MA. (BW-RT 92-95, BW40 38+41)
Summer,
Bill took his first drink at Emmy and Catherine Grinnell’s house in New Bedford,
MA at age 22. It was a Bronx Cocktail (gin, dry and sweet vermouth and orange
juice). He got thoroughly drunk and passed out. He threw up and was miserably
sick the next day (PIO 54-56, BW-RT 95-97, BW40 42-43, NG 13-14, BWFH 26)
Dec.,
Congress approved the 18th amendment to the U.S. Constitution for the
prohibition of alcohol. (www)
1918
Jan., Frank Buchman met Sam Shoemaker
in Peking (now Beijing), China. Buchman introduced Shoemaker to the four
absolutes (honesty, purity, unselfishness and love). Shoemaker had a spiritual
awakening and conversion experience and became a devoted member of Buchman’s
First Century Christian Fellowship. (NW 29, 47-52, RAA 117-118)
Jan.,
Lois left her Aunt Marian’s School in NJ. (LR 22, RAA 118)
Jan.
24, spurred by rumor that Bill would soon be heading overseas, Bill and Lois
were married at the Swedenborgian Church in Brooklyn, NYC. Their wedding date
was originally Feb. 1st. Lois’ brother Rogers Burnham stood as best
man. Bill’s last stateside posting was at Fort Adams near Newport, RI. (BW-RT
100, PIO 58+407, RAA 146, BW-FH 27)
Feb.
15, Dr. Bob and Anne’s adopted daughter, Suzanne, was born (CH 11, PIO 140)
June 5,
Dr. Bob and Anne’s son, Robert (Smitty), was born (CH 2, PIO 140)
July
18, Bill sailed from Boston to NY Harbor on the British ship Lancashire. On the
voyage to England, an officer shared his brandy with Bill. Detained in London,
Bill visited Winchester Cathedral and was stirred by a "tremendous sense of
presence.” Bill read the epitaph on the headstone of a Hampshire Grenadier.
(BW-RT 102-108, PIO 59-60, RAA 146)
Nov.
11, Armistice Day: at 11 o’clock, on the 11th day of the 11th
month. World War I ended. (BW-RT 109, RAA 146, www)
1919
Jan. the 18th amendment to
the U.S. Constitution, for the prohibition of alcohol, was ratified. (www)
Mar.,
Bill sailed from Bordeaux, France on the S.S. Powhatan to NY Harbor. (BW-RT 109)
May,
Bill was discharged from the Army at Camp Devens. (BW-RT 109)
Dr.
Bob’s father, Judge Walter Perrin Smith, died. (DBGO 10)
Summer,
Bill and Lois settled in Brooklyn at the home of Lois’ father on 182 Clinton St.
(BW-RT 113, LR 27, PIO 62+407, RAA 147)
Lois’
father, Dr. Clark Burnham, got Bill a job as a clerk in the insurance department
of the NY Central Railroad. Bill worked for his brother-in-law Cy Jones. After
working “some months” Bill was fired. (PIO 63, BW-RT 119, BW-40 57)
For
several weeks Bill worked on the NY Central piers, near 72nd St. in
Manhattan, driving spikes into planks. Threatened with violence, because he
wouldn’t join a union, he decided to move on. (PIO 63, BW-RT 114)
Aug.,
Bill and Lois set off for an extended month-long walking trip thru Maine, New
Hampshire and Vermont. Lois encouraged this partly to give them time to think
and partly to get Bill away from drinking. (LR 27-30, PIO 64-65)
Oct.,
Congress passed the Volstead Act (The National Prohibition Act) over President
Wilson’s veto. (www)
1920
Feb., Lois got a job with the Red Cross
at the Brooklyn Naval Hospital. (LR 31)
Bill
and Lois moved into a 1-room furnished apartment on State St. (around the corner
from her parents’ home on Clinton St.). Bill, not finding what he wanted to do,
was restless and increased his drinking. (LR 31)
1921
Feb., Lois started work at a better
paying job at the psychiatric ward of Bellevue Hospital. Bill and Lois moved
from State St. to a 3-room attic apartment on Amity St. (LR 33-35, BW-RT 124)
May,
Bill answered a blind advertisement in the NY Times and received a reply
from Thomas Edison to come to his laboratory to take an employment test of 286
questions. (PIO 64-66)
July,
Bill and Lois set off on another camping trip on the 300-mile Long Trail in the
Green Mountains in VT. The trips to the country were Lois’ way to get Bill to
stop drinking. On the trip, Bill decided to enter Law School. (LR 31, BW-FH 30)
Later in the year, Bill entered night classes at the Brooklyn Law School, a
division of St. Lawrence Univ. (LR 31, PIO 64)
Late
summer, Bill found work as a fraud and embezzlement investigator for the U.S.
Fidelity & Guarantee Co. (and got his first glimpse of Wall St.). Shortly after
going to work at USFG, Bill received an employment invitation from Edison but
did not accept it. He decided to stay around Wall St. (PIO 64, BW-RT 121-123,
BW-FH 31)
Frank
Buchman was invited, by two Anglican Bishops, to visit Cambridge, England.
Buchman’s movement the First Century Christian Fellowship would emerge
into what would soon be called the Oxford Group and receive wide
publicity during the 1920’s and 1930’s. (DBGO 53-54, CH 3)
Dec.
Bill’s grandmother, Ella Brock Griffith, died. (PIO 70, BW-RT 125)
1922
Ebby T’s family business failed. (PIO
83)
Bill’s
bouts with alcohol were becoming more frequent. And more and more he was
drinking alone. (BW-RT 124-125, CH 3, LR 34, PIO 67)
Frank
Buchman resigned his job at Hartford Theological Seminary to pursue a wider
calling. Over the next few years he worked mostly in universities (Princeton,
Oxford and Cambridge). During the economic depression, students, particularly in
Oxford, responded to his approach and were ordained ministers. Others gave all
their time working with him. (www)
Summer,
Lois experienced two ectopic pregnancies, the 1st in June and the 2nd
in July. After the 2nd such misfortune, Bill and Lois were obliged to
face the fact that they would never have children. (PIO 67, LR 34)
1923
Dr Bob and Anne adopted their daughter
Suzanne, age 5; the same age as their son Robert (Smitty). (CH 2-11, DBGO 35-36)
May,
Lois experienced her 3rd ectopic pregnancy. Bill was so drunk that he
didn’t go to the hospital to see her. (BW-RT 128, LR 34, RAA 147, BW-FH 37)
Bill’s
mother, Emily, married Dr. Charles Strobel. (PIO 75)
Christmas, Bill wrote a vow in the flyleaf of the family bible: “Thank you for
your love and help this terrible year. For your Christmas I make you this
present: No liquor will pass my lips for one year. I’ll make the effort to keep
my word and make you happy.” Two months later there was another such vow. (BW-RT
127, RAA 148, BW-FH 33)
1924
Bill’s grandfather (and substitute father) Gardner Fayette Griffith, died.
(BW-RT 128, PIO 70)
Bill
finished law school but never picked up his diploma. He showed up for the final
exams so drunk that he couldn’t read the questions. He paid his $15 fee for the
diploma but never picked it up because he was required to attend a commencement
ceremony to pick it up. Bill was unwilling to do that. (LR 31, PIO 67+70, BW-FH
32)
Feb.,
Bill again vowed not to drink. As time passed there would be still other vows.
(BW-RT 127)
1925
April, Bill and Lois began a 1-year motorcycle venture on a 3-wheeler
Harley-Davidson. Among other places, they visited GE in Schenectady, NY and
Portland Cement in Egypt, PA. By winter they were in FL. From there they headed
north and into Canada. Bill became one of the first “Market Analysts.” His
alcoholism progressed. (PIO 69-75, BW-FH 5, LR 37, 39)
1926
Spring, Bill and Lois returned to Brooklyn for the marriage of Lois’ sister
Kitty on June 17. Both were previously injured in a motorcycle accident. (BW-RT
141, LR 60-61)
Bill’s
drinking was openly and frankly discussed with Frank Shaw at business
conferences between Bill and Shaw. (PIO 75, BW-RT 141) For the next few years
fortune threw money and applause Bill’s way. (PIO 75) But his success as a
securities analyst was to be marred by a worsening drinking problem. (PIO 407)
June/July, Bill and Lois went off again for another 6 months of investigating
businesses. They could have traveled first class on Bill’s expense account and a
$20,000 line of credit ($250,000 in year 2000 dollars). Instead they drove a
secondhand DeSoto that Lois outfitted with curtains so that they could sleep
along side of the road. (BW-FH 40)
1927
Jan., Bill wrote to Lois that “There will be no booze during 1927.” It was
short-lived. (LR 69)
Summer,
Bill and Lois did an on-site investigation of Cuban Sugar in Havana. Bill’s
drinking created problems and he accomplished little. Frank Shaw wrote to Bill
expressing his concern. In Sept. Bill wrote to Frank Shaw that drinking had
always been a problem for him and that he was “through with alcohol forever.”
(PIO 79-80, BWFH 43-44)
Sept/Oct. (?), on the way home Bill and Lois stopped in Miami Beach to see
Bill’s father and his second wife, Christine. Bill met his half-sister, Helen,
born in 1916. (PIO 80)
On
their return to NY, Bill and Lois rented a 3-room apartment at 38 Livingston St.
in Brooklyn. It wasn’t big enough to satisfy Bill’s grandiose desires, so they
enlarged the apartment by renting the one next to it and knocking out the wall
between. (BW-RT 144, LR 71, PIO 80-81)
By the
end of 1927 Bill was so depressed by his behavior that he signed over to Lois
all rights, title and interests of his stockbroker accounts with Baylis & Co.,
and Tobey & Kirk. (LR 72, PIO 82)
1928
Bill was a star among his Wall St. associates and made great financial
strides. But there was no question about the seriousness of his drinking. He
sank into a form of hostility that poisoned his relationships. Bill’s
brother-in-law, Dr. Leonard V. Strong, confronted him on the progressive nature
of his drinking and referred Bill to a colleague to get a complete physical
examination. (BW-RT 144-145, PIO 81)
Summer
(?), a group of Rhodes Scholars, returned home to South Africa, from Oxford
University, England, to tell what happened in their lives through meeting Frank
Buchman. A railway employee labeled their train compartment “The Oxford Group.”
The press took it up and the name stuck (the name “First Century Christian
Fellowship” faded). (www)
Sept.
28, St. Thomas Hospital in Akron, OH opened. Shortly after, Dr. Bob met Sister
Ignatia for the first time. Sister Ignatia was the registration clerk for the
hospital. (SI 6-9, DBGO 45)
Oct.
20, Bill signed a pledge in the family Bible: “To my beloved wife that has
endured so much, let this stand as evidence to you that I have finished with
drink forever.”(PIO 81)
Thanksgiving, Bill signed another pledge in the family Bible: “My strength is
renewed a thousand fold in my love for you.” (PIO 81)
1929
Jan., Bill signed yet another pledge in
the family Bible: “To tell you once more that I am finished with it. I love
you.” (PIO 81)
Jan.,
on a trip to Manchester, VT Bill called Ebby T and they drank together for the
first time in Albany, NY. After an all-night party, they chartered a flight,
with Flyers Inc. in Albany, to be the first flight to Manchester. They landed
drunk (the pilot as well) and disgraced themselves. (EBBY 39-41, PIO 83-84,
BW-40 121, NW 20, LR 76-77, LOH 367, BW-RT 183-184)
Dr. Bob
went back to school and studied under the Mayo brothers in Rochester, Minnesota.
He also studied at the Jefferson Medical School in Philadelphia. He became a
surgeon proctologist. (CH 101, DBGO 33)
Oct.
28-29, the Stock Market collapsed. Bill was broke and $60,000 in debt
(equivalent to over a half million today). He and his benefactor, Frank Shaw,
parted company. Later, (Nov.?) Bill’s friend, Dick Johnson, offered him a job in
Montreal, Canada with Greenshields and Co. By Christmas the Wilsons were in
Canada (BW-RT 152-154, LOH 367, LR 81, PIO 85-86, RAA 148-149, BW-FH 44-46)
1930
Bill and Lois lived lavishly in
Montreal in a luxury furnished Glen Eagles apartment on Cotes des Neiges, in
Mount Royal (overlooking the city). They had a brand new Packard automobile and
membership in the Lachute Country Club. (BW-RT 154, BW-FH 45, LR 81)
Dr.
William Duncan Silkworth, having lost his investments and savings in the stock
market crash, and in desperation, made a connection with Towns Hospital at a
salary of $40 a week. (PIO 101)
Sept 3,
Bill wrote his last promise to stop drinking in the family Bible: “Finally and
for a lifetime, thank God for your love.” After that he gave up making promises
in despair. (LR 79)
Fall,
in less than 10 months after his arrival in Montreal, Bill’s drinking got him
fired, by Dick Johnson, from his job at Greenshields & Co. Lois went back to
Brooklyn, because her mother had fallen ill. Bill stayed behind in Montreal to
clean up details. (PIO 86, BW-RT 155, BW-FH 45)
Dec.,
after a binge by Bill that started in Montreal and carried him into VT, Lois
went to get Bill and they finally returned to Clinton St. and moved into a room
there. Lois’s mother was gravely ill and dying from bone cancer. (PIO 86-87,
BW-FH 46)
Christmas, Lois’ mother died. Bill had been drunk for days beforehand and could
not attend the funeral. He stayed drunk for many days after the funeral. (PIO
87, BW-RT 156, LR 82, BW-FH 46)
1931
Bill was
able to work occasionally through 1931, but entered a phase of helpless
drinking. Lois went to work at Macy’s, earning $19 a week and that became their
livelihood. (PIO 90, 128, BW-FH 47)
The
Common Sense of Drinking, by Richard
Peabody, was published. (NW 16)
Rowland
H. saw Dr. Carl Gustav Jung in Zurich, Switzerland. Rowland was told that there
was no medical or psychological hope for an alcoholic of his type; that his only
hope was a spiritual or religious experience - in short a genuine conversion.
This was considered "the first in the chain of events that led to the founding
of AA." Rowland had to be treated by Jung twice. (NW 11-19, NG 8-9)
Dec.,
Russell “Bud” Firestone (an alcoholic and son of Akron business magnate Harvey
Firestone Sr.) was introduced to Dr. Sam Shoemaker on a train trip returning
from an Episcopal church conference in Denver, CO. Bud surrendered, with Sam,
and was released from his alcohol obsession. He joined the Oxford Group. (NW 15,
65)
1932
Apr. 8, Bill’s brother-in-law Gardner
Swentzel (Kitty’s husband) helped him form a stock buying syndicate with Arthur
Wheeler and Frank Winans. Bill was assigned a generous interest with the
stipulation that if he started drinking again, the deal would be off and he
would lose his interest in the venture. (PIO 90-91, BW-RT 164-165)
May,
Bill went on a business trip to Bound Brook NJ with a group of engineers from
the Pathe Co. to look at a new photographic process. It turned into a disaster.
In a small hotel, Bill drank Apple Jack (Jersey Lightning) and was drunk for 3
days. His contract with Wheeler and Winans was cancelled. (PIO 91-92, BW-RT
165-167)
Financier, Joe Hirschhorn (sometimes spelled Hirshhorn) hired Bill to analyze
and evaluate companies. (DBGO 45, PIO 93-98)
1933
Jan., Harvey Firestone Sr., out of
gratitude for the help the Oxford Group gave his son Bud, helped sponsor a large
weekend (DBGO says 10-day) OG conference headquartered at the Mayflower Hotel in
Akron. (Note: Bud later started drinking again). Frank Buchman, accompanied by
29 members (DBGO says 60) of his team, were met at the train station by the
Firestones and the Rev. Walter Tunks. The event launched the OG as a regular
activity in Akron. It attracted Henrietta Sieberling, T. Henry and Clarace
Williams and Anne Smith. (NW 65-67, CH 2, DBGO 55)
President Franklin D. Roosevelt declared a mortgage moratorium which prevented
banks from foreclosing on unpaid mortgage payments. (Note: this kept Bill & Bob
from being evicted from their homes) (CH 114)
Early,
Anne Smith attended meetings of the Oxford Group in Akron with her friend
Henrietta Sieberling. Anne later got Dr. Bob to attend. Meetings were held on
Wed. nights at T. Henry and Clarace Williams’ house on 676 Palisades Dr. (NW
67-68, SI 32+34, DBGO 53-60, CH 2-3, 28-29)
Early,
beer became legal and Dr. Bob went through a beer drinking phase (“the beer
experiment”). It was not long before he was drinking a case and a half a day and
fortifying the beer with straight alcohol. In his Big Book story, he says that
this is also around the time when he was introduced to the Oxford Group (which
he participated in for 2 ½ years in before meeting Bill). (DBGO 42, AABB
177-178, NW 62)
Feb.,
Congress passed the 21st amendment to the U.S. Constitution to repeal
the 18th amendment. (www)
Joe
Hirschhorn sent Bill on a trip to Toronto, Canada. Bill arrived at the Canadian
border drunk and was refused entry. He protested so belligerently that he was
arrested and jailed. After finally arriving in Toronto, Bill stayed drunk and
had to be sent home as useless. This was Bill’s last chance on Wall St. (BW-FH
48, PIO 98)
May,
Lois’ father married “Joan Jones.” Lois was the only family member who attended
the civil wedding ceremony. (LR 83-84, PIO 98, BW-RT 170)
June-Sept., Lois took a 3-month leave of absence from Macy’s. She and Bill
spent the summer in VT at the home of Bill’s sister Dorothy (who, with her
husband and family, was vacationing in Europe). (BW-FH 49, LR 84, BW-RT 171)
Autumn,
Lois, now earning $22.50 a week at Macy’s, turned to her brother-in-law, Dr.
Leonard Strong, who arranged (and paid for) Bill’s 1st admission to
Towns Hospital at 293 Central Park West, NYC. Bill was subjected to the
“belladonna cure” which involved “purging and puking” aided by, among other
things, castor oil. Belladonna, a hallucinogen, was used to ease the symptoms of
alcohol withdrawal. (PIO 98-101, LR 85, BW-40 104, NG 14-15, 310, BW-FH 50,
BW-RT 174)
Dec 5,
the 21st amendment to the U.S. Constitution was ratified. Prohibition
of alcohol was repealed. (www)
1934
The Sermon On The Mount,
by Emmet Fox, was published. The book became one of the Fellowship’s most useful
guides until publication of the Big Book in 1939. The book was popular with Bill
as well as Dr. Bob and the early Akron members. (NW 111, 114, DBGO 310-311)
Dr. Bob
was appointed to the courtesy staff of St. Thomas Hospital. (SI 9, DBGO 45)
Roland
H. found sobriety through the Oxford Group. It is not clear whether this
occurred in Europe or in the U.S. He became a dedicated OG member in NY, VT and
upper MA. He was a prominent member at the Calvary Church in NYC. (NW 11-19, NG
8-9, PIO 113-114)
Sister
Ignatia befriended Dr. Thomas P. Scuderi, an emergency room intern (who later
became the medical director of Ignatia Hall). She convinced the new doctor that
alcoholics were sick and accident-prone and persuaded him to allow alcoholics to
“rest” in St. Thomas Hospital before being released. Dr Scuderi and Sister
Ignatia also secretly treated Bill D. who, a year later, became AA Number 3. (SI
10, DBGO 51).
March,
Lois quit her job at Macy’s to take Bill to VT. They stayed there until the
summer. (PIO 105-106)
July,
Ebby T. was first approached, in Manchester, VT, by his friends, Cebra G. and
Shep C., who were abstaining from drinking. They informed Ebby of the Oxford
Group in VT. Ebby was not quite ready to stop drinking. (EBBY 51-55, PIO 113)
July
(?), Bill’s 2nd admission to Towns Hospital (again paid by Leonard
Strong). He met Dr. Silkworth for the first time. Dr Silkworth explained the
obsession and allergy of alcoholism to Bill. Bill started drinking again almost
immediately upon discharge. At this point he was unemployable, $50,000 in debt
(around $600,000 in year 2000 dollars), suicidal and drinking around the clock.
(PIO 106-108, BW-RT BW-40 114-117, NG 15, 310, BW-FH 50-55)
Aug.,
Rowland H. and Cebra G. persuade a VT court to parole Ebby T. into their
custody. (Note: the presiding judge was Cebra G’s father Collins G.). Ebby had
met Rowland only shortly before. Later, in the fall, Rowland took Ebby to NYC
where he sobered up with the help of the Oxford Group at the Calvary Episcopal
Mission. Sam Shoemaker was the rector at the Calvary Church (the OG’s U.S.
headquarters). (RAA 151, AACOA vii, NW 20-21+26, EBBY 52-59, NG 9-10, PIO 115)
Aug.
(?), Bill’s 3rd admission to Towns Hospital (again paid by Leonard
Strong). Dr. Silkworth pronounced Bill a hopeless drunk and told Lois that Bill
would have to be committed. Bill left the hospital a deeply frightened man and
sheer terror kept him sober. He found a little work on Wall St. which began to
restore his badly shattered confidence. (PIO 106-109, LR 87, AACOA vii, BW-RT
176-177, NG 15, 310, BW-FH 4-5, 54-55)
Nov.
11, Armistice Day. Bill decided to play golf and wound up getting drunk and
injured. Lois began investigating sanitariums in which to place Bill. (BW-FH 56)
Nov.
(late), Ebby T. visited Bill at 182 Clinton St. and told his story to Bill ("one
alcoholic talking to another”). (AACOA vii) A few days later, Ebby returned with
Shep C. They spoke to Bill about their experience with the Oxford Group. (NG
17-18, BW-FH 57-58, NW 22-23, PIO 111-116, BW-RT 187-192)
Dec. 7,
Bill decided to investigate the Oxford Group Mission at 246 E. 23rd
St. He showed up drunk with a drinking companion he found along the way (Alec
the Finn). Bill kept interrupting the service wanting to speak. On the verge of
being ejected, Ebby came by and fed Bill a plate of beans. Bill later joined the
penitents and drunkenly “testified” at the meeting. (BW-40 136-137, NG 18-19,
BW-FH 60, NW 23, PIO 116-119, BW-RT 193-196)
Dec.
11, Bill, 39 years old, decided to go back to Towns Hospital and had his last
drink (4 bottles of beer purchased on the way). He received financial help from
his mother, Emily, for the hospital bill. (RAA 152, NG 19, NW 23, PIO 119-120).
Dec.
14, Ebby visited Bill at Towns Hospital and discussed with Bill the principles
of the Oxford Group that enabled him to find sobriety. After Ebby left, Bill
fell into a deep depression (his “deflation at depth”). Later, he had his "hot
flash" spiritual experience. Dr. Silkworth assured Bill he was not crazy and
told him to hang on to what he had. (BW-40 141-148, NG 19-20, NW 23-24, PIO
120-124, GTBT 111)
Dec 15,
Ebby brought Bill a copy of William James' book The Varieties of Religious
Experience. Bill read it and was deeply inspired by it. The book revealed 3
key points for recovery (1) calamity or complete defeat in some vital area of
life, (b) admission of defeat, and (c) appeal to a higher power for help. Bill
continued studying the book along with the writings of Emmet Fox. (EEBY 70, SI
26, BW-40 150-152, NG 20-24, NW 24-25, PIO 124-125, GTBT 111-112)
Dec.
18, Bill was discharged from Towns Hospital and began working with drunks. He
and Lois attended Oxford Group meetings at the Calvary House Hall on 4th
Avenue. (LR 197, BW-40 155-160, NG 24-25, PIO 127)
Dec.
(late), Bill joined with Oxford Group alcoholics who gathered at Stewart’s
Cafeteria after regular OG meetings. (BW-RT 207, BW-40 160)
1935
Early, Bill worked with alcoholics at
the Calvary Mission and Towns Hospital, emphasizing his "hot flash" spiritual
experience. Alcoholic Oxford Group members began meeting at his home on Clinton
St. Bill had no success sobering up others. (AACOA vii, AABB, BW-FH 69, PIO
131-133)
Apr.,
Bill had a talk with Dr. Silkworth who recommended that he stop preaching about
his “hot flash.” He told Bill to hit the drunks hard with the medical view, and
break down their strong ego by telling them about the obsession that condemned
them to drink and the allergy that condemned them to go mad or die. (BW-RT 211,
NG 25-26, PIO 133))
Apr.,
Bill returned to Wall St. and was introduced to Howard Tompkins of the firm Baer
& Co. Tompkins was involved in an attempt to take over control of the National
Rubber Machinery Co. (NRMC) based in Akron, OH. (BW-RT 211, NG 26, BW-FH 74, PIO
133-134)
May,
Bill went to Akron and the proxy fight was quickly lost. Bill remained behind at
the Mayflower Hotel very discouraged and afraid he might drink. (BW-RT 212, PIO
134-135)
May 11,
Bill realized he needed another alcoholic. He made telephone calls in the
Mayflower Hotel to members of the clergy. Rev. Walter Tunks referred Bill to
Norman Sheppard who then referred Bill to Henrietta Seiberling, an Oxford Group
adherent. Bill called her and introduced himself as “a member of the Oxford
Group and a rum hound from NY.” Henrietta met with Bill at her house and
arranged a meeting the next day at the Seiberling Estate with Dr. Bob and his
wife Anne. (SI 21, BW-RT 212-213, DBGO 63-67, NG 26-28, PIO 135-138)
May 12,
Mother’s Day. Bill (39 years old) met Dr. Bob (56 years old) at Henrietta
Sieberling’s house. Bob was too hung over to eat dinner and planned to stay for
only 15 minutes. Bill told Bob of his experiences with alcoholism and recovery.
Bob then opened up and they talked until after 11PM. (BW-RT 214-215, DBGO 67-69,
NG 28-32, BW-FH 4)
May,
Bill and Bob tried unsuccessfully to sober up a “once prominent surgeon” who had
developed into a “terrific rake and drunk.” (DBGO 70)
June,
Henrietta Sieberling arranged for Bill to be put up at the Portage Country Club.
Soon after, Bill moved to Dr. Bob’s house. They worked with alcoholics and
attended weekly Oxford Group meetings on Wed. nights at the home of T. Henry and
Clarace Williams. (Note: T. Henry lost his job as a result of the proxy fight
that Bill came to Akron for) (AACOA 141, NW 68-69, 73, DBGO 99-102, PIO 145-147)
(Note: GTBT 95-96 says that meetings were held at Dr. Bob’s house and they moved
to the Williams’ house in late 1936 or early 1937)
June 10
(June 17?), after a drunken binge at the AMA convention in Atlantic City, NJ,
Dr. Bob had his last drink and AA was founded. Dr. Bob’s last drink (a beer),
and “one goofball”, were given to him by Bill to steady him prior to a surgery.
(SI 22, DBGO 72-75, NG 32, PIO 147-149)
June
11, Dr. Bob suggested that he and Bill start working with other alcoholics. They
unsuccessfully tried to sober up Eddie R. described as an “alcoholic atheist”
and “able to produce a major crisis of some sort about every other day.” (DBGO
77-81, NG 37, PIO 151-152)
June
28, Bill and Bob visited Bill D., at City Hospital (the "Man on the Bed” and
“Alcoholic Number 3"). Bill D. was a prominent attorney in Akron and had been
hospitalized 8 times in 1935 because of his drinking. Within days he checked out
of the hospital (July 4). Within a week he was back in court sober and argued a
case. (AABB 184, BW-RT 219-220, DBGO 81-89, NG 37, PIO 152-154)
July
(?), Lois went to Akron to join Bill at the Smith’s house for two weeks (LR 197,
NG 41, BW-FH 85).
July,
Ernie G. sobered up (“Alcoholic Number 4”). He eventually married Dr. Bob’s
daughter, Sue, in Sept. 1941. Ernie was unable to maintain continuous sobriety
and their marriage was a disaster. In June 11 1969, their daughter Bonna
committed suicide after taking the life of her 6 year old daughter Sandy. Ernie
G. died two years later to the day. (DBGO 92-95, CH 72-74, PIO 154-155)
Aug.,
Back in NY, Bill held meetings at his house at 182 Clinton St. on Tues. nights.
(BW-RT 225, PIO 160-162, GTBT 96)
Nov.
19, Ebby came to live with Bill and Lois at 182 Clinton St. (LR 197, EBBY 72, NG
42-44)
Winter,
Hank P. and Fitz M. sobered up at Towns Hospital. They provided a big help to
Bill. (LR 101, BW-RT 225-226, NG 43-44) (Note: PIO 191 says 1937)
Estimated AA membership in 1935: 5 members in 2 groups. (AACOA 310)
1936
Bill's efforts with alcoholics received
criticism from the Oxford Group members in NY. There was a contrast between the
warmth and understanding of the OG members in Akron and the criticism and
rejection of the OG members in NY. (NG 44-45, NW 73)
June,
the Oxford Group was at the height of its popularity. 10,000 people flocked to
the Berkshires to attend a meeting at Stockbridge, Massachusetts. (PIO 170)
Aug.,
Frank Buchman, had a public relations disaster caused by a newspaper article in
the NY World Telegram which made him appear sympathetic to Adolph Hitler
(at a time when the Nazi leader was launching his aggression). It was very
negative publicity for the Oxford Group. (NW 30, 96, DBGO 155, BW-FH 96, PIO
170-171)
Sept.,
Lois’ father died. The house at 182 Clinton St. was taken over by the mortgage
company which allowed Lois and Bill to stay there for a small rental. (PIO 175)
Dec.,
Charles Towns offered Bill a job at his hospital. Bill wanted it. The question
was presented to the NY group and they rejected it. This was the emergence of
the concept of “group conscience.” (LR 197, BW-RT 232-234, NG 63-64, PIO
175-177)
Estimated AA membership in 1936: 15 members in 2 groups. (AACOA 310)
1937
Early, Bill and Lois attended a major
Oxford Group “house party” at the Hotel Thayer in West Point, NY. For the past 2
½ years Bill and Lois had been attending 2 OG meetings a week. (NW 89)
The
spirit of the Third Tradition was established when a member asked to be
admitted, who described himself as the “victim of another addiction even worse
stigmatized than alcoholism.” The group was Akron, OH and the guideline,
established by Dr. Bob, was “What would the Master do?” (DBGO 240-241)
Late
spring, leaders of the Oxford Group, at the Calvary Mission, ordered alcoholics
staying at the mission not to attend meetings at 182 Clinton St. Bill and Lois
received criticism from OG members for having “drunks only” meetings at their
home in Brooklyn. The Wilsons were described as “not maximum” (an OG term for
those believed to be lagging in their devotion to OG principles). (EBBY 75, LR
103, BW-RT 231, NG 45, NW 89-91)
Residents at 182 Clinton St. were Ebby T., Oscar V., Russell R., Bill C. and
Florence R. Bill C., a young Canadian and former attorney, committed suicide in
Bill’s home (Note: PIO 165 says summer of 1936). Florence R. was the first woman
at Clinton St. She went to Washington DC to help Fitz M. and started drinking
again in 1949. One night Fitz was called to identify her body at the Washington
morgue. She had committed suicide. (AABB 16, BW-RT 237, LR 107, CBC)
Apr.,
Ebby T. got drunk after 2 years and 7 months of sobriety. (LR 197, EBBY 77,
BW-FH 63, PIO 177)
Aug.,
Bill and Lois stopped attending Oxford Group meetings. (LR 197)
Nov.,
Bill and Dr. Bob met in Akron and compared notes. 40 cases staying sober. More
than 20 sober for over a year. All had been diagnosed as hopeless. A meeting was
held, at the home of T. Henry Williams, to consider Bill's ideas for a book,
pamphlets, hospitals and how to expand the movement. It narrowly passed by a
majority of 2. The NY group was more enthusiastic. (BW-RT 239-243, DBGO 123-124,
NG 56-57, PIO 180)
Nov.,
Bill W. and Hank P. tried to raise money for the book without success. (LR 197,
PIO 181)
Dec.,
Bill’s brother-in-law, Dr. Leonard V. Strong, helped arrange a meeting with
Willard S. Richardson (who was in charge of John D. Rockefeller’s
philanthropies) in an appeal to raise funds. A second meeting was held which
included Bill, Dr. Bob, Hank P., Fitz M., and Ned P. (a new man). Other
attendees were Dr. Silkworth, Richardson, Frank Amos, A. LeRoy Chipman and
Albert Scott. (BW-RT 245-246, NG 65-66, PIO 181-185)
Estimated AA membership in 1937: 40 members in 2 groups. (AACOA 310)
1938
Feb., Frank Amos made a trip to Akron,
OH to investigate the group there. Amos made a very favorable report to Willard
Richardson who, in turn, presented it to John D. Rockefeller Jr. with a
recommendation to donate $50,000 (Note: BW-FH 105-106 states the recommendation
was actually a total of $10,000, $5,000 a year for two years). (SM S3, BW-RT
246, LR 197, DBGO 128-135, BW-FH 105-106, PIO 185-187)
Feb.,
John D. Rockefeller Jr. refused to make the $50,000 donation but did donate
$5,000. The funds were used to pay off Dr. Bob’s mortgage and provided Bill and
Bob with $30 a week as long as the fund lasted (BW-RT 247, AACOA 150-151, DBGO
135, PIO 187-188)
May 20,
(Note: PIO 193 says March or Apr.) beginning of the writing of the book
Alcoholics Anonymous at Hank P.’s office, Honors Dealers, at 17 William St.
in Newark, NJ. Bill wrote, edited and rewrote the manuscripts at home on legal
pads then dictated chapters to Hank’s secretary, Ruth Hock. Most of the early
Big Book documents were lost during a later move from Newark to NYC. (AACOA vii,
159 BW-RT 248-250, LR 197, BW-FH 115, PIO 193, 235)
While
nations of the world armed for World War II, Frank Buchman called for a “moral
and spiritual re-armament” to address the root causes of the conflict. Buchman
renamed the Oxford Group to Moral Re-Armament (www, NW 44)
June
15, Lois’ recollection of the first use of the term Alcoholics Anonymous.
(LR 197)
July
15, in a letter to Messrs. Richardson, Chipman and Scott, of the Rockefeller
Foundation, Bill invited them to his home on Clinton St. for meetings of
Alcoholics Anonymous – this was the first documented use of the name of the
Fellowship. (PIO 202)
July
18, Dr. Richards of Johns Hopkins, stated in a letter that Bill, at that time,
was using the name Alcoholics Anonymous both as the working title of the
book and as the name of the Fellowship. (PIO 202)
Aug.
11, the Alcoholic Foundation was formed. The first Board consisted of 5
Trustees: Dick Richardson, Frank Amos and Dr. Leonard Strong (non-alcoholics).
The alcoholic members were Dr. Bob and Bill R. a NY member who soon got drunk
and was replaced. (BW-RT 248, AACOA 151-152, LR 197, NG 307, 330, PIO 188) (Note
NG end note states AACOA date is erroneous as well as the Amos’ date of 5 Aug).
Sept.,
Trustee, Frank Amos, arranged a meeting between Bill and Eugene Exman, Religious
Editor of Harper Brothers publishers. Exman offered Bill a $1,500 advance on the
rights to the book. The foundation Trustees urged acceptance of the Harper
Brothers offer. Instead, Hank P. and Bill formed Works Publishing Co. and sold
stock at $25 par value. Of, 600 shares issued, Hank and Bill received 200 shares
each. 200 shares were sold to others. (LR 197, BW-FH 116-119, SM S6, PIO
193-195)
Charles
Towns loaned Hank and Bill $2,500 for the book. (PIO 196, SM S7)
Oct.,
Bill’s recollection of the first use of the term Alcoholics Anonymous.
(AACOA 165, PIO 202)
Dec.,
the initial version of the Twelve Steps was written at Bill’s home on 182
Clinton St. (in approximately 30 minutes). Much argument ensued over their
wording. (AACOA vii, 161, BW-RT 253, PIO 197-199)
Estimated AA membership in 1938: 100 members in 2 groups.
(AACOA vii, AABB xiii, AACOA 310)
1939
Jan., draft book text and stories (18
from Akron, 10 from NY) were completed. (AACOA 164, BW-RT 255)
Jan.,
the Alcoholic Foundation board was increased from 5 to 7 members with the
non-alcoholics still holding the majority. (PIO 189)
Jan.,
400 multilith copies of the book were distributed for evaluation. The misspelled
title on the multilith copies was Alcoholic’s Anonymous. (AACOA 165, LR
197, NG 74, PIO 200)
Jan,
(?) NY member, Jim B., suggested the phrase “God as we understand Him.”
Jim later moved to Philadelphia in Feb. 1940 and was the founder of AA in that
city. (BW-FH 140, GTBT 137)
Mar.
(?), the much changed book manuscript was presented to Tom Uzzell, an editor at
Collier’s and a friend of Hank P. (and a member of the faculty at NYU).
The manuscript was estimated to be 600 to 800 pages (including personal
stories). Uzzell reduced it to approximately 400 pages. Most cuts came from the
personal stories which had also been edited by Jim S., an AA member and
journalist from Akron. (BW-FH 126, PIO 203)
Apr.,
the 1st edition of Alcoholics Anonymous was published with a
price of $3.50 ($40 in today’s dollars). The printer, Mr. Blackwell of Cornwall
Press, was instructed to use the thickest paper in his shop. The original volume
was so bulky that it became known as the “Big Book.” The idea was to convince
the alcoholic that he was getting his money’s worth. (AACOA viii, NG 76, PIO
204-205)
Apr.
11, Marty M., attended her first meeting at Bill’s house on 182 Clinton St. She
was a charity patient at the Blythewood Sanitarium in Greenwich, CT,
under the care of Dr. Harry Tiebout. Tiebout gave her a manuscript of the Big
Book to read and arranged for her to go to the meeting.
(BW-RT 271, BW-FH 8, 125-126, AACOA 18, PIO
210-213)
Apr.
26, Bill and Lois had to vacate their home on 182 Clinton St. This began an
almost 2-year period where they moved from house to house and stayed with
friends. By Lois’ count it amounted to 54 moves. (AACOA 173, LR 197, BW-RT 258,
BW-FH 91, PIO 213-218)
Apr.
29, Morgan R. appeared on the radio program We the People with Gabriel
Heatter. It resulted in only 12 replies. (PIO 210)
May 18,
Led by Clarence S. the Cleveland, OH group met separately from Akron (and the
Oxford Group) at the home of Abby G. This was the first group to call itself
Alcoholics Anonymous. The Clevelanders still sent their most difficult cases
to Dr. Bob in Akron for treatment. (NW 94, SI 35, DBGO 161-168, NG 78-79, PIO
224).
June
25, the New York Times wrote a favorable review of the Big Book. It did
not help sales much since the Big Book was not available in book stores. (BW-FH
127)
Aug.
Dr. Bob and Sister Ignatia (who was in charge of admissions) started work at St.
Thomas Hospital in Akron. On Aug.16, Sister Ignatia arranged for the first AA
admission, Walter B., at the request of Dr. Bob. Dr. Bob revealed to Sister
Ignatia his own problems with alcohol. (AACOA viii, SI 15-19, NG 79-80 DBGO
187-188)
Sep.
30, Liberty Magazine, headed by Fulton Oursler, carried a piece titled
Alcoholics and God by Morris Markey (who was influenced to write the article
by Charles Towns). It generated hundreds of inquiries from around the nation.
Oursler became friends with Bill and later served as a Trustee on the Alcoholic
Foundation Board. (LOH 145, BW-FH 127-129, PIO 223-224)
Oct.,
sudden expansion of membership at Cleveland occurred based on the Liberty
Magazine article and editorials in the Cleveland Plain Dealer by
Elrick B. Davis. Cleveland membership jumped from a dozen to over 100 in a
month. Clarence S. of Cleveland called himself “the Father of Alcoholics
Anonymous.” (AACOA viii, 177-178, BW-RT 261, LR 197, LOH 145-146, SI 164, PIO
224)
Hank
P’s business failed. Hank and Bill moved to small one-room office at 17 William
St. in Newark, NJ. (BW-RT 261)
Nov/Dec, Akron members withdrew from the Oxford Group and held meetings at Dr.
Bob’s house. It was a painful separation due to the affection the alcoholic
members had toward T. Henry and Clarace Williams. (NW 93-94, SI 35, DBGO
212-219, NG 81, GTBT 123)
Dec.,
Rockland State Hospital, near Monsey, NY, became the first mental hospital to
have its own AA Group. (BW-FH 128)
Estimated AA membership in 1939: 400 members (AACOA 310)
1940
Jan., the Akron group moved meetings
from Dr. Bob’s house to King’s School on Wed. night. (SI 35-36, DBGO 219, NW 94)
Early,
the famous “Rule Number 62” story was relayed to Bill in a letter from a
chastened “promoter member.” (NG 107)
Feb. 8,
John D. Rockefeller Jr. sponsored a dinner for AA at the Union League Club. 75
of his 400 invited guests (and friends) attended. The dinner raised $2,200
($1,000 of which came from Rockefeller). Rockefeller and his dinner guests would
provide about $3,000 a year for the next 4 years (to 1945). This was
accomplished through the Alcoholic Foundation which raised funds and received
the income from the sale of the Big Book. (LR 197, BW-RT 264-267, AACOA 182-187,
NG 92-94, BW-FH 109-112, PIO 232-235).
Feb.,
the Houston Press ran 6 articles about AA, written anonymously by former
Cleveland member Larry J. on his way to Houston. The articles became one of the
early AA pamphlets. (LR 197)
Feb,
the first clubhouse was rented at 334 ¼ West 24th St. in NYC. It
formerly was the Illustrators Club. (LR 197) In November, Bill and Lois
moved into a small upstairs bedroom of the clubhouse for about a year. (Note:
PIO 239 says 5 months) (AACOA 180, BW-RT 272-273, PIO 238-239)
Mar.
16, the fledgling Alcoholic Foundation office moved from 17 William St. Newark,
NJ to 30 Vessey St., Room 703, in NYC. The mailing address was Box 658 Church
St. Annex Post Office. Ruth Hock became AA’s first national Secretary. The
non-alcoholic Trustee members of the Alcoholic Foundation would remain a
majority for 39 years. (BW-RT 268, AACOA 179, LR 129 +197, BW-FH 112, SM S6, PIO
235)
Apr,
Hank P. got drunk after 4 years sobriety. He wanted to marry Ruth Hock who
refused. (BW-RT 268, PIO 228-229)
Apr.
16, Cleveland Indians baseball star “Rollicking” Rollie H., had his anonymity
broken (in the Cleveland Plains Dealer and nationally). Bill W. did
likewise in later personal appearances in 1942 and 1943. (BW-RT 268-270, DBGO
249-253, NG 85-87, 96-96, AACOA 24-25, BW-FH 134-135, PIO 236-238, GTBT 156)
May 22,
Works Publishing Co. was incorporated. Bill and Hank P. gave their stock
to Works Publishing Inc. with the stipulation that Dr. Bob and Anne would
get 10% royalties on the Big Book for life. Hank was persuaded to relinquish his
shares in exchange for a $200 payment for office furniture he claimed belonged
to him. (LR 197, BW-FH 119, SM 11, PIO 235-236, GTBT 92)
May/June, Hank P., harboring many resentments against Bill, went to Cleveland,
OH and claimed that Bill was getting rich from the Rockefellers and taking the
Big Book profits for himself. Clarence S. (founder of Cleveland AA and Hank’s
brother-in-law for a number of years in the 1940’s) spent many years accusing
Bill of financial irregularities and claiming himself as the true founder of AA.
(PIO 255-257, BW-FH 131, PIO 231, 255-257)
Oct.,
Bill W. went to Philadelphia to speak to Curtis Bok, one of the owners of the
Saturday Evening Post (the largest general circulation magazine in the
country). In Dec. Jack Alexander was assigned to do a story on AA. (LR 131,
BW-RT 278-279, BW-FH 140-141, PIO 244-245)
Dec
(Nov?), Bill W. met Father Ed Dowling SJ, for the first time at the 24th
St Clubhouse. Father Ed became Bill’s spiritual advisor (spiritual sponsor) and
helped start AA in St. Louis, MO. (BW-RT 275-278, BW-FH 137-139, PIO 241-243,
GTBT 120-121)
Estimated AA membership in 1940: 2,000 members (AACOA 180, 310, LOH 147, SM S6)
1941
Fitz. M’s
sister, Agnes, loaned Works Publishing Inc. $1,000 to pay the printer,
Cornwall Press, to release Big Books being held for payment. (BW-FH 92)
Mar. 1,
Jack Alexander's Saturday Evening Post article was published. The
publicity caused membership to jump from 2,000 (1,500?) to 8,000 over the year.
Bill and two other members’ pictures appeared full-face in the article. (BW-RT
281, LOH 150, BW-FH 146, PIO 245-247) Around 6,000 appeals for help were mailed
to the NY Office as a result of the article. (SM S7, PIO 249) The NY office
asked AA members to contribute $1 per year for support of the office. (LOH 149,
SM S7)
April
11, Bill and Lois moved into a new home in Bedford Hills, NY (they named it
Stepping Stones). (BW-RT 284, PIO 259-260)
Dr. Sam
Shoemaker left the Oxford Group (now called Moral Re-Armament) and formed
a fellowship called Faith at Work. The MRA members were asked to
completely vacate the premises at Calvary Hall. (EBBY 75-76)
May 8,
Ethel M., the first female member in Akron, OH sobered up. (SI 131)
June,
Ruth Hock received a newspaper clipping of the Serenity Prayer from Jack
C. It was printed in the obituary section of a June edition of the New York
Herald Tribune. She printed it on a card and included it in mail going out
from the office. (BW-RT 261-262, GTBT 167, PIO 252)
Dec. 8,
the U.S. entered World War II.
Estimated AA membership in Nov. 1941: 6,000 members in 200 groups. (PIO 266)
Estimated AA membership in 1941: 8,000 members. (AACOA 310)
1942
A. LeRoy Chipman solicited John D.
Rockefeller Sr., and his 1940 dinner guests, for $8,500 to buy back the
remaining outstanding shares in Works Publishing Inc. Rockefeller lent
$4,000, his son Nelson $500 and the other dinner guests lent $4,000.
Rockefeller’s custom was to forgive $1 of debt for each $1 repaid. (BW-FH
110-111, SM S7)
Ruth
Hock left the NY office to get married. Bobbie B. took her place. (GTBT 168, PIO
304) (Note: LOH 152 says 1941)
Oct.,
Clarence S. stirred up a controversy in Cleveland, after discovering that Dr.
Bob and Bill were receiving royalties from the sale of the Big Book. (DBGO
267-269, BW-FH 153-154)
Correspondence from groups gave early signals of the need to develop guidelines
to help the groups with problems that occurred over and over. The basic ideas
for the Twelve Traditions emerged from this correspondence. Also, basic
principles for the Twelve Traditions were well-reflected in the Foreword to the
First Edition. (PIO 305-306
Oct.,
Volume 1, No. 1 of the Cleveland, OH Central Bulletin was published.
1943
The Alcoholic Foundation Board was
enlarged. (GTBT 78)
July, 1st
summer session of the Yale Univ. School of Alcohol Studies. (CBC)
Oct. 4,
Fitz M died from cancer. (CBC)
1944
May 9, Bill W. presented a talk to the
Medical Society of the State of NY. (GSO, LOH 155, BW-FH 163, SM S9)
Dr.
Harry Tiebout published his first paper on the subject of Alcoholics
Anonymous.
Apr.
14, the Alcoholic Ward opened at St. Thomas Hospital in Akron, OH. (SI 108)
May 1,
the Vessey St. office was moved to 415 Lexington Ave, NY, 17, NY near the Grand
Central Terminal. The new mailing address was PO Box 459, Grand Central Annex.
(LOH 152)
June,
Volume 1, No. 1 of The Grapevine was published. A one year subscription
was $1.50. It was started by 6 volunteer members (“6 ink stained wretches”) as a
newsletter for AA members in the NYC area. (LOH 153, SM S79, PIO 305).
Summer,
Bill W. began twice-a-week treatment with Dr. Tiebout for debilitating episodes
of depression. Some AA members were outraged and castigated Bill for “not
working the program”, “secretly drinking” and “pill taking.” Bill endured the
attacks in silence. (BW-RT 299, BW-40 166, BW-FH 6, 160-161, 166, PIO 292-303,
GTBT 121)
Estimated AA membership in 1944: 10,000 members in 360 groups. (BW-FH 163, PIO
304)
1945
Bill started seeing psychotherapist,
Dr. Frances Weeks (a Jungian) once a week. He continued to see her until 1949
for his episodes of depression. (BW-FH 166-167)
At the
suggestion of Earl T, founder of AA in Chicago, Bill codified the Traditions and
wrote essays on them for The Grapevine. Initially, the Twelve Traditions
were called Twelve Points to Assure Our Future. (GTBT 54-55, 77, SM S8,
PIO 306)
Bill W.
encouraged the 41st St. clubhouse in NY to take in a black man who
was an ex-convict, with bleach-blond hair, women’s clothing and wearing makeup.
The man also admitted to being a “dope fiend.” When asked what to do about it,
Bill asked “did you say he was a drunk?” When answered “yes” Bill replied “well
I think that’s all we can ask.” (BW-FH 8, PIO 317-318)
June,
Cleveland, OH hosted a “Big Meeting” to celebrate AA’s 10th
anniversary. Est. attendance 2,500 from 36 states, 2 Canadian provinces and 1
from Mexico. (GSO, GTBT 27-28)
Dec.
20, Rowland H. died. He remained a member of the Oxford Group (Moral
Re-Armament). It is unclear whether he stayed sober or had relapses. Tragically,
he lost two sons in World War II. (www)
Late,
Universal Pictures movie The Lost Weekend premiered and generated
favorable publicity for AA. (GTBT 25, 156, NG 120)
Estimated AA membership in 1945: 15,000 members in 560 groups. (NG 113, BW-FH
163, BW-FH 180)
1946
Apr, The Grapevine carried the
article Twelve Suggested Points for AA Tradition. (LOH 20)
The
General Service Conference was first projected. (LOH 338) (Note: SM 12 says
1945)
The
AA Preamble first appeared in The Grapevine. (NG 254)
A
dispute rose over a solicitation letter from the National Council for Education
on Alcoholism (NCEA) prepared by Marty M. The letter broke her anonymity. Dr.
Bob’s and Bill’s names also appeared on the NCEA letterhead. (GTBT 29, NG 119)
Estimated AA membership in 1946: 30,000 members in 1,000 groups. (BW-FH 163)
1947
Mar. 3, Nell Wing started work at the Alcoholic Foundation, 415 Lexington
Ave., NYC. (GTBT 15)
Summer,
Bill W. took instructions in the Catholic faith from Monsignor (later Bishop)
Fulton J. Sheen. He was introduced to Bishop Sheen by Fulton and Grace Oursler.
Bill’s instructions lasted for about a year after which Bill lost interest. (NG
52, BW-FH 174-175, PIO 280-282, GTBT 81)
Dr. Bob
was stricken with cancer. (BW-RT 303-304)
Estimated AA membership in 1947: about 40,000 members with 1,250 groups. (GTBT
22)
1948
Summer, Dr. Bob is diagnosed as having
terminal cancer. He closed his medical office and retired from practice so that
he and Anne could live their last days together quietly. (DBGO 320)
Estimated AA membership in 1948: 70,000 members. (DBGO 287)
Estimated AA membership in 1948: 60,000 members in 2,000 groups. (BW-FH 163)
1949
As plans for the first International
Convention were being laid, Earl T., founder of AA in Chicago, suggested to Bill
that the Twelve Points to Assure Our Future would benefit from revision and
shortening, Bill set out to develop the short form of the Traditions in time for
the Convention. (GTBT 55, 77, PIO 334)
May,
Bill presented a talk to the American Psychiatric Association’s 105th
Annual Meeting in Montreal, Canada. (GSO, LOH 156, SM S9, PIO 334)
June 1,
Anne Ripley Smith died at St. Thomas Hospital. Sister Ignatia secretly baptized
Anne (as an act of love) prior to her death. In a memorial Grapevine article,
Bill W. said that Anne was “quite literally, the mother of our first group,
Akron Number One.” (LOH 353, DBGO 327, SI 136, PIO 334).
1950
The NY office moved to 141 East 44th
St. (LOH 157, GTBT 106).
Grapevine subscriptions were 30,000. (LOH 158).
Mar.
29, a 2nd Saturday Evening Post article was written by Jack
Alexander titled The Drunkard’s Best Friend (GTBT 34)
July
28-30,15th anniversary and 1st International Convention at
Cleveland, OH. Est. 6,000 to 8,000 attendees over the weekend. (BW-RT 308, GSO)
Dr. Bob made a brief appearance at the Convention for his last talk. (GSO) The
Twelve Traditions were adopted unanimously by the attendees. (AACOA, LOH 121)
Aug.
Dr. Bob gave Bill W. his endorsement of the idea for the General Service
Conference (DBGO 325)
Nov.
16, Dr. Robert Holbrook Smith, co-founder of AA, died of cancer at City Hospital
in Akron, OH. His funeral service was conducted by the Rev. Walter Tunks whose
answer to a phone call 15 years earlier brought Bill and Bob together. It is
estimated that, over his 15 years of sobriety, Dr. Bob helped more than 5,000
alcoholics. (GSO, DBGO 344) Bill described Bob as “the prince of the Twelfth
Steppers.” (GTBT 90)
AA
members were asked to donate $2 per year to support the NY office. (LOH 159)
Estimated AA membership in 1950: 100,000 members in 3,500 groups. (BW-FH 185)
1951
Mar., William D. Silkworth MD dies at
Towns Hospital in NYC. (CBC)
Apr., 1st
General Service Conference in NYC at the Hotel Commodore (beginning a 5-year
experimental period). It was composed of 37 U.S. and Canadian Delegates plus
AA’s General Service Hq. staff and trustees. (LOH 129, SM S99). Panel 1 (37
delegates) took office for a 2-year term. Its theme was “Not to Govern but to
Serve.” (NG 129-130). It recommended that:
·
Non-alcoholics should continue to serve on
the Board of the Alcoholic Foundation.
·
The alcoholic members of the board of
trustees ought to have a fixed term of office.
·
In future years, AA textbook literature
should have Conference approval.
Apr. at
the close of the GSC, Lois W. and her close friend and neighbor, Anne B.,
invited the wives of the delegates, along with local family group members, to
Stepping Stones to discuss opening a service office for Al-Anon Family Groups.
Later, the first AFG headquarters (called the “Clearing-house Committee) was
established at the 24th St. clubhouse in NYC. (LR 174-176)
First
draft of the Third Legacy Manual by Bill W. (SM S1)
Oct.
30, the Lasker Award was given to AA by the American Public Health Association
at the San Francisco, CA Opera House. (AACOA viii, LOH 136)
1952
Apr., 2nd experimental
General Service Conference in NYC. Panel 2 (38 additional delegates) took office
for a 2 year term. Its theme was “Progress.” (NG 130) It recommended that:
·
Facsimile reproductions of the Lasker Award
be made available to all AA Groups in suitable form for framing where desired.
·
Delegates and state committeemen make a
special effort to enlighten their groups in respect to the position of the
General Service Office as the functional center of the AA movement …
·
The non-alcoholic trustees continue to
serve us without restrictions. (Floor action)
Dec 15,
the first patient, Don L., was admitted to St. Vincent’s Charity Hospital
Rosary Hall Solarium alcoholic ward. The ward was built by volunteer AA
members (and friends) to assist (and as a tribute to) Sister Ignatia. The
insignia on the door, “R.H.S.”, coincided with the initials of Robert Holbrook
Smith. It was Sister Ignatia’s dedication as a memorial to Dr. Bob. (SI 185-187,
309)
1953
Apr., 3rd experimental
General Service Conference in NYC. Its theme was “We are Standing on the
Threshold of Maturity.” (NG 130) It recommended that:
Approval be given to plans of the trustees
for changing the name of the Alcoholic Foundation to a new designation using
“Alcoholics Anonymous” coupled with a suitable word, that word not be
“international.” (Floor action)
Alcoholics Anonymous not be
incorporated by Congressional action. (Floor action)
No policy should be declared or
action taken on matters liable to gravely affect AA as a whole unless by consent
of at least three-quarters of the members present. A mere majority should not
authorize action. (Floor action) (Reaffirmed in 1954)
Jan.,
the book Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions was published. (GTBT 37)
Works
Publishing Inc. was renamed to AA
Publishing Inc. (NG 68)
1954
Jan. 18 (20?), Hank P. died in
Pennington, NJ. (CBC)
Feb. 2,
Bill W. declined an honorary Doctor of Laws degree from Yale University. (LOH
206)
Feb.
14, Bill’s father, Gilman Barrows Wilson, died penniless in Vancouver. (BW-40
10, BW-FH 198)
Apr., 4th
experimental General Service Conference in NYC. Its theme was “Confidence and
Responsibility.” (NG 130) It recommended that:
All Conference-approved literature
have on its face an identifying symbol. (Note: circle & triangle)
The AA Exchange Bulletin
(now called Box 4-5-9) be approved.
The publication rights of
Twenty-Four Hours a Day not be accepted. (floor action)
The trustees be authorized to
change the name of The Alcoholic Foundation to the General Service Board of
Alcoholics Anonymous Inc. (floor action) (SM S12)
Sept.
17, Bill D., (AA Number 3) died. (LOH 360)
Oct.,
the Alcoholic Foundation was renamed to the General Service Board of
AA (AACOA viii, NG 131)
May,
Bill W. engaged in a series of correspondence with notorious murderer Caryl
Chessman who was on San Quentin prison death row. (Note; PIO shows 1956) (PIO
364-366, BW=FH 198-199)
1955
Apr., 5th experimental General Service
Conference in St. Louis, MO. This GSC was the only one not held in NYC. (SM S2)
It recommended that:
·
The proposed permanent “Charter of the
General Service Conference of Alcoholics Anonymous – North American Section” be
adopted subject to approval of the 20th Anniversary Convention of AA.
(Floor action). (SM S17-S18)
·
A plan for selecting Class B trustees be
approved. (Note: this was the first move to establishing Regions – the initial
geographical groupings were called Area A thru Area E)
July,
20th anniversary and 2nd International Convention at St.
Louis, MO in the Kiel Auditorium. Est. attendance 5,000. Its theme was “Coming
of Age.” (BW-RT 311, AACOA viii, GTBT 42-51, NG 131, SM S2) (Bill claimed
attendance was 5,000 – Nell Wing, GTBT 105, was told by Dennis, who handled
registrations that attendance was 3,100 plus a few hundred walk-ins) It
recommended that:
·
July 3, by resolution, the Three Legacies
of Recovery, Unity and Service were turned over to the movement by its
old-timers. The resolution was adopted by the Convention by acclamation and by
the Conference by formal resolution by vote. (SM S91-S92)
July,
the 2nd edition of Alcoholics Anonymous was published.
Aug.
29, Bill W. joined with Aldous Huxley and took LSD in CA under the guidance of
Gerald Heard and Sidney Cohen. Others invited to experiment (and who accepted)
were Nell Wing, Father Ed Dowling, Sam Shoemaker and Lois. Marty M. and Helen W.
(Bill’s mistress) also participated in NY. Bill had several experiments with LSD
up to 1959 (perhaps into the 1960’s). (PIO 370-376, NG 136-137, BW-FH 9,
177-179, GTBT 81-82)
Distribution of the book Alcoholics Anonymous reached 300,000. (BW-FH
120)
1956
Apr., 6th GSC recommended
that:
·
Approving continuation of the present
structure of the Board of Trustees of AA (8 non-alcoholic members and 7
alcoholic members). It marked the start of a 10 year campaign by Bill to change
the ratio of the Board to a majority of alcoholics. (PIO 393-397)
1957
Creation of the first overseas General Service Board of AA in Great Britain and
Ireland.
Apr., 7th
GSC recommended that:
·
The General Service Headquarters designate
Thanksgiving Week as “AA Gratitude Week.”
·
No change in Article 12 of the [Conference]
Charter or in AA tradition or in the Twelve Steps of AA may be made with less
than the written consent of three-quarters of the AA groups …” (SM S87)
·
The Conference approved a unique new set of
by-laws for the General Service Board which had earlier been adopted by the
board itself on a contingency basis. (floor action)
Apr.
22, new bylaws, written by Bernard B. Smith, were adopted by the General Service
Board. (Note: the alcoholic Class B trustees were legalistically described as
“ex-alcoholic”). (SM S102-S109)
Oct.,
AA Comes of Age was published.
Estimated AA membership in 1957: over 200,000 in 7,000 groups in 70 countries
and U.S. possessions.
1958
Apr. 28, Bill W. presented a talk to the New York City Medical Society on
Alcoholism.
Apr., 8th
GSC recommended that:
·
In regard to the attitude of the movement
as a whole toward the use of so-called AA “chips”, “tokens”, “lapel emblems” and
similar devices … was a matter for local autonomy and not one on which the
Conference should record a definite position in behalf of the movement. (floor
action)
·
The Conference voted unanimously to ask
Bill W. to provide continuing leadership on all projects of movement-wide
concern in which he was currently interested. (floor action)
·
The Conference approved the action of the
GSB in re-assigning to Bill royalty rights in his three books (Alcoholics
Anonymous, Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions and Alcoholics Comes of Age), and
in books he may write in the future, for the duration of the copyrights
involved. (floor action)
·
The suggestion of the name change from
General Service Headquarters to General Service Office be adopted.
·
The Conference recognize the original use
of the word “honest” before “desire to stop drinking” and its deletion from the
Traditions as part of the evolution of the AA movement. Any change to be left to
the discretion of AA Publishing, Inc.
Oct.
The Days of Wine and Roses premiered on Playhouse 90 TV. (CBC)
Grapevine subscriptions were 40,000 (LOH 158).
1959
Apr., 9th GSC recommended
that:
·
Delegates speaking from the floor limit
themselves to 3 minutes.
AA
Publishing, Inc. was renamed to AA
World Services, Inc. (AAWS).
Grapevine subscriptions were 35,000 (LOH 396).
1960
E.M. Jellinek published The Disease
Concept of Alcoholism. (NG 312)
Apr.,
Bill W. declined the opportunity to be on the cover of Time magazine. (CBC)
Apr. 3,
Father Edward Dowling SJ, died in Memphis, TN. (LOH 364)
Apr.,
10th GSC:
July
1-3, 25th anniversary and 3rd International Convention at
Long Beach, CA. Est. attendance 10,000.
1961
Frank Buchman died. Moral
Re-Armament (MRA) declined significantly in numbers and influence and became
headquartered in Caux, Switzerland where it still exists. (NW 45, 97-98, www)
Jan.
23, Bill W. wrote a letter to Dr. Carl Gustav Jung which acknowledged his
contribution to the movement. (NW 9, PIO 381-386)
Jan.
30, Dr. Jung replied to Bill’s letter. (NW 11)
Apr.,
11th GSC recommended that:
·
The Birthday Plan to provide
“supplementary” support to AAWS be adopted and continued.
·
It was the sense of the meeting that no
action be taken by the 1961 Conference on the proposal for a paperback edition
of the Big Book. (floor action)
·
(The Conference recognizes that the
publication of cheap editions of AA books would probably reduce the income to
World Services, and Bill W’s personal income. This Conference unanimously
suggests the following to the Trustees: To add a rider to Bill’s royalty
contract to the effect that, if cheaper books are ever published, Bill’s
royalties be increased by an amount sufficient to keep the royalty income at the
same average level it had been for the five years before the cheaper books were
published; (further that) as time goes on, if inflation erodes the purchasing
power of this income, the Trustees will adjust the royalties to produce the same
approximate purchasing power; this to be effective during the lifetime of Bill
and Lois and Bill’s legatees. (Floor action).
Provision was made for Ebby T. to receive $200 a month from Big Book royalties
for the remainder of his life. (PIO 393)
Mar.
20, Bill W. replied to Jung’s letter (PIO 384)
May 15,
Bill Wilson’s mother, Emily, died. (PIO 387)
June.
6, Dr. Carl Gustav Jung died. (PIO 386)
First
Al-Anon World Service Conference held on a trial basis. (AFG pamphlet AR-2)
Estimated AA membership in 1961: 160,000 members in 9,000 groups (BW-FH 203)
1962
Apr. 26, 12th GSC
recommended that:
·
The Conference voted unanimously to accept
Bill’s manuscript on Twelve Concepts for World Service and recommended
that it be distributed initially as a supplement to, and eventually as an
integral part of, the Third Legacy Manual. (floor action) (Note: this the only
AA publication which has a by-line name, i.e. “by Bill W.”). (GTBT 60, 79, SM
preface to Twelve Concepts)
·
Bill’s proposal to change the ratio of the
GSB was voted down. (GTBT 79)
The
film Days of Wine and Roses premiered. (BW-FH 229)
1963
The U.S. and Canada General Service
structure was organized into 6 Regions. (AACOA x)
Apr.,
13th GSC recommended that:
·
There is no such thing as an AA retreat.
·
An agreement between Bill W., co-founder,
and AAWS Inc., covering royalties derived from Bill’s writings be approved.
(Note: Bill made a royalty agreement with AAWS that allowed him to bequest his
royalties to Lois and Lois, in turn, to bequest the royalties to “approved
beneficiaries” of her estate. Bill’s royalties derived from the U.S. sales of
the Big Book, Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions, AA Comes of
Age and As Bill Sees It. His royalty agreement also provided that 10%
of his royalties go to his mistress, Grapevine Editor, Helen W.) (PIO 393, BW-FH
192-193)
·
The Conference approve the action of the
GSB of Trustees in making a special monthly grant to Ebby T., the man who helped
co-founder Bill W. achieve sobriety and who was indirectly responsible for the
creation of the AA Fellowship. (floor action)
Oct.
22, E. M. Jellinek died. (CBC)
Oct.
31, Dr. Sam Shoemaker died. In a Feb. 1967 memorial Grapevine article, Bill W.
wrote “Dr. Sam Shoemaker was one of AA’s indispensable. Had it not been for his
ministry to us in our early times, our Fellowship would not be in existence
today.” (NW 56, GTBT 97)
1964
Apr., 14th GSC
1965
Apr.,
15th GSC recommended that:
·
A small edition of Twelve Steps and Twelve
Traditions to be introduced at the 30th Anniversary Convention be
approved.
July
2-4, 30th anniversary and 4th International Convention at
Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Est. attendance 10,500. Keynote “The Declaration.” The
declaration was AA’s responsibility pledge: “I am responsible. When anyone,
anywhere, reaches out for help, I want the hand of AA always to be there. And
for that I am responsible.” The film Bill’s Own Story was shown for the
first time. (NG 142)
Dec.,
Bill enthusiastically embraced a campaign to promote a vitamin B3 (niacin, aka
nicotinic acid) therapy. This created Traditions issues within the Fellowship.
(PIO 388-390)
1966
Mar. 26, Ebby T. died (of emphysema).
He had 2 ½ years sobriety. (LOH 367, EBBY 143, PIO 336)
Apr. 1,
Sister Mary Ignatia Gavin died. (LOH 371, SI 280)
Apr.,
16th GSC recommended that:
·
The restructure plan of the GSB be approved
changing the board into a body of 14 AA (Class B) and 7 non-alcoholic (Class A)
trustees. (floor action) (AACOA x, PIO 396-397)
·
The General Service Board consist of 8
regional AA trustees, six from the U.S., two from Canada. Also, 6 “General
service” Class B trustees (chosen for business skill) – 4 from the NY City area,
one from Canada, one from anywhere in the U.S. (floor action)
Dr.
Harry M. Tiebout died. (LOH 369)
1967
The AA Way of Life,
now titled As Bill Sees It, was published.
Apr.,
17th GSC recommended that:
·
Guidelines for group separation of AA and
Al-Anon be approved.
·
The Serenity Prayer be incorporated into
the format of The Grapevine.
GSC
recommended that all inquiries pertaining to vitamin B3 (niacin) be referred to
an office in Pleasantville, NY in order that Bill’s personal interest in these
matters not involve the Fellowship. (PIO 391)
1968
Jan. 24, Bill and Lois celebrated their
50th wedding anniversary. (LR 159)
Apr.,
18th GSC.
First
AA membership survey taken. (NG 273)
1969
Apr., 19th GSC recommended
that:
·
The Conference approve the recommendations
to incorporate into the existing AA Guidelines the questions on how AA and
Al-Anon can cooperate with regard to central offices and area and regional
get-together and conventions. (Floor action) (By floor action, the Conference
also approved a resolution of gratitude to AFG)
Oct. 9,
first World Service Meeting held in NYC with delegates from 14 countries.
1970
Apr., 20th GSC recommended
that:
·
It go on record as opposing the use of the
title “AA Counselor.” (floor action)
Apr.,
GSO moved to 468 Park Ave. South in NYC. (PIO 399)
July,
35th anniversary and 5th International Convention at Miami
Beach, FL. Est. attendance 10,700 (13,000?) Keynote was “Declaration of Unity”:
"This we owe to AA's future: to place our common welfare first; to keep our
Fellowship united. For on AA Unity depend our lives and the lives of those to
come.” It was Bill’s last public appearance. (NG 145-146)
Summer,
long-time AA Trustee Bernard B, Smith died. (NG 392)
Dec.,
Lois’ brother Rogers died (he introduced Lois to Bill). (GTBT 85)
1971
Jan. 24, William Griffith Wilson,
co-founder of Alcoholics Anonymous, 36 years sober, died (of emphysema, although
sometimes described as heart failure) at Miami Beach, FL. It is also his and
Lois’ 53rd wedding anniversary. (BW-FH 5)
Apr.,
21st GSC recommended that:
·
The short form of the Twelve Concepts be
approved. (floor action)
Estimated AA membership in 1971: 311,450 members in 16,459 groups. (PIO 406, NG
267)
1972
Nell Wing was appointed the first AA
Archivist. (GTBT 132)
Apr.,
22nd GSC recommended that:
·
The Twenty-Four Hour Book not be
confirmed as Conference-approved literature.
·
That GSO should not accept contributions
from clubs ... (floor action)
·
In accordance with AA’s Tradition of
self-support, the Conference voted unanimously that AA not accept “Stepping
Stones” property (the home of Bill and Lois W.) for any purpose. (floor action)
(NG 263)
Oct. 5,
2nd World Service Meeting held in NY.
1973
Apr., 23rd GSC.
Came
to Believe was published.
AA
Archives opened at the General Service Office. (SM S73) (Note GTBT and NG say
1975)
The
Trustees of the General Service Board formed an Archives Committee. (NG 294)
(Note: SM S73 says AA Archives opened at GSO) Its first meeting was on Oct. 24.
Its members were Chairperson George C., Rev. Lee Belford and Dr. Milton Maxwell.
(GTBT 134-135)
Distribution of the book Alcoholics Anonymous reached the 1 million
mark. The millionth copy was presented to President Richard Nixon in the
Whitehouse. (NG 267, BW-FH 113)
1974
Apr.,
24th GSC recommended that:
·
A short form of the Twelve Concepts for
World Service for inclusion in the AA Service Manual. (SM preface to Twelve
Concepts).
1975
Apr., 25th GSC recommended
that:
·
GSO discontinue distribution of the “Bill
W.” book (the biography published by Harper & Row). (floor action)
·
We go forward with mini-conferences and
provide them as often as possible, and that these be held at the request of the
region. The sense of the meeting was that for the time being the regional
meetings be known as AA Regional Forums. (Floor action)
Living
Sober was published. (Note: the book
today is the 2nd highest publication in AA)
July, 40th
anniversary and 6th International Convention held at Denver, CO. Est.
attendance 19,300. Keynote “Let it Begin With Me.” The first flag ceremony was
held at this convention. (AACOA xi)
Sept.
19, Jack Alexander died. (CBC)
Nov. 3,
AA Archives formally opened in NYC. (NG 294, GTBT 140) (Note SM S73 says 1973)
1976
Apr., 26th GSC.
Publication of the 3rd edition of Alcoholics Anonymous.
1977
Apr., 27th GSC.
Grapevine subscriptions reached 100,000.
1978
Apr., 28th GSC.
Distribution of the book Alcoholics Anonymous reached the 2 million
mark. (NG 267)
1979
Apr., 29th GSC.
Summer,
Not-God A History of Alcoholics Anonymous, by Ernest Kurtz, was
published. (NG, CBC)
Dec. 6,
Henrietta Sieberling died. (CBC)
1980
Apr., 30th GSC recommended
that:
·
That the Archives film Strip Markings on
the Journey be Conference-approved (floor action)
·
The filmstrip Markings on the Journey
be shown within the Fellowship only (floor action)
·
The unedited manuscript of Dr. Bob and
the Good Old-timers be accepted.
July,
45th Anniversary and 7th International Convention held at
New Orleans, LA. Est. attendance 22,500. Keynote “The Joy of Living.” First
presentation of the Archives film Markings on the Journey. (NG 290) The
first Archives Workshop was held at this convention. (GTBT 141)
July
22, Marty M., founder of the National Committee on the Education on Alcoholism,
died. (CBC)
1981
Feb., 1st issue of
Markings, the AA Archives newsletter. (CBC)
Apr.,
31st GSC recommended that:
·
The AA Service Manual and Twelve
Concepts for World Service be combined
into one volume.
Distribution of the book Alcoholics Anonymous reached the 3 million
mark. (NG 267)
1982
Apr., 32nd GSC.
Dec.,
Nell Wing retired as AA Archivist and was replaced by Frank M. (GTBT 141, CBC)
1983
Apr., 33rd GSC recommended
that:
·
Membership surveys be continued on a random
basis.
Distribution
of the book Alcoholics Anonymous reached the 4 million mark. (NG 268)
1984
Apr. 16-21, 34th GSC
recommended that:
·
The Bill Wilson biography be approved with
the title Pass It On.
1985
Apr. 14-20, 35th GSC
recommended that:
·
Since each issue of The Grapevine
cannot go through the Conference-approved process, the Conference recognizes
The AA Grapevine as the international journal of Alcoholics Anonymous.
(Note: shows wording amendments made in 1986)
AAWS
discovered that the copyrights to the 1st and 2nd editions
of the Big Book had expired without being renewed. The copyright on the 1st
first edition lapsed in 1967 and the copyright on the new material in the 2nd
edition lapsed in 1983. (NG 299)
July,
50th anniversary and 8th International Convention held at
Montreal, Canada Est. attendance 44,000.
The
second Archives Workshop was held at this Convention. Ruth Hock Crecelius was
the featured speaker. (GTBT 141) and was presented with the 5 millionth copy of
the Big Book at the Convention. (CBC)
As part
of the festivities surrounding AA’s 50th anniversary, Stepping
Stones, the Wilson’s home since 1941, was declared a NY State Historic Site.
(BW-FH 3)
Distribution of the book Alcoholics Anonymous reached the 5 million
mark. (NG 268)
Estimated AA membership in 1985: 1,000,000. (BW-FH 211)
1986
Apr. 20-26, 36th GSC
recommended that:
·
A definitive
book on AA history from 1955 to 1985 be prepared and brought to the 1987
Conference for consideration.
·
The 1987 Conference Policy/Admissions
Committee consider the formation of a Conference Archives Committee. (floor
action)
Sept.
12-16, First permanent International Al-Anon General Services Meeting. (AFG
pamphlet AR-2)
Nov.,
First paperback edition of the Big Book published. (NG 301, CBC)
1987
Apr. 26-May 2, 37th
GSC recommended that:
·
A Conference Archives Committee not be
formed at this time (trustee’s Archives Committee only)
·
No changes or additions be made to the
preamble.
·
Statements regarding AA’s primary purpose
be available (blue card definitions of open and closed meetings).
·
Undertaking the development of a daily
reflections book.
·
A report on the progress of The History
of AA: 1955 - 1985 book be made to the 1988 GSC. (floor action)
Estimated AA Membership in 1987: 1,556,316 members in 73,192 groups (NG 267)
Distribution of the book Alcoholics Anonymous reached the 6 million
mark. (NG 268)
1988
Apr. 17-23, 38th GSC
recommended that:
·
Work continue on the AA history book, and
that this be subject to further editing through the coordinating efforts of each
regional trustee with each delegate for further updating, corrections, and
additional information.
Oct. 5,
Lois Burnham Wilson, co-founder of Al-Anon Family Groups, died at 97 years of
age.
Oct.,
Language of the Heart published by AA Grapevine Inc. (GTBT 57, LOH)
1989
Apr. 23-29, 39th GSC
recommended that:
·
Work continue on a definitive book on AA
history from 1955, as recommended by the 1986 GSC, along the lines of a proposal
recently submitted to the trustee’s Literature Committee, which focuses on major
events and developments since the co-founder turned AA over to the Fellowship,
rather than focusing on the beginning of AA and the history of the 91 areas of
the U.S. and Canada.
·
The Grapevine develop an ongoing AA history
section, drawing on archival material, including area and regional histories.
·
A Conference Archives Committee should not
be formed at this time. …
Apr.
24, Dr. Leonard V. Strong died. (CBC)
Apr.
30, the film My Name is Bill W. premiered on ABC TV’s Hallmark Hall of
Fame. (CBC)
1990
Life magazine named Bill W. among the 100 most important figures of the 20th
century. (BW-FH 4)
Apr.
22-28, 40th GSC recommended that:
·
The AA History book project continue until
completion, and that the time frame covered be expanded to include 1955 to the
present.
July,
55th anniversary and 9th International Convention held at
Seattle, WA. Est. attendance 48,000. Nell Wing was presented with the 10
millionth copy of the Big Book. (Note PIO 206 says 10 millionth copy printed Mar
1991)
1991
Mar., distribution of the book Alcoholics Anonymous reached the 10
million mark. (PIO 206)
Apr.
21-27, 41st GSC recommended that:
·
The AA History book project continue until
completion, and that a manuscript be forwarded to the 1992 Conference Literature
Committee for consideration and approval.
1992
Apr. 26-May 2, 42nd GSC recommended that:
·
That the new AA History Book manuscript be
returned to the 1992 Conference Literature Committee for further review and then
forwarded to the 1993 Conference Literature Committee.
The
General service Office moved to 475 Riverside Dr. in NYC. (SM S10)
1993
Apr. 18-24, 43rd GSC recommended that:
·
The AA History Book project be deferred for
two years so that a new team of AA servants can look at the History Book with
fresh ideas.
1994
Apr. 17-23, 44th GSC recommended that:
·
The circle and triangle logo be
discontinued on all Conference-approved literature.
·
The 1987 GSC action item to not establish a
Conference Archives Committee be reaffirmed.
1995
Apr. 30-May 6, 45th GSC
recommended that:
·
A Spanish language version of The
Grapevine, named La
Viña,
be published.
·
The first 164 pages of the Big Book,
Alcoholics Anonymous, the Preface, the Forewords, ‘The Doctor’s Opinion’,
‘Doctor Bob’s Nightmare’ and the Appendices remain as is.
July,
60th anniversary and 10th International Convention held at
San Diego, CA. Est. attendance?
1996
Apr. 21-27, 46th GSC
recommended that:
·
The suggested guidelines developed by the
trustee’s Nominating Committee for changing regional boundaries be accepted. …
(SM S39)
June,
first issue of La Viña
published on a bi-monthly basis. (SM S81-S82)
1997
Apr. 13-19, 47th GSC
recommended that:
·
A draft 4th edition Big Book be
developed keeping in mind the 1995 Advisory Action.
1998
Apr. 19-25, 48th GSC
recommended that:
·
Formation of an Archives Committee as a
secondary committee. (SM S57)
·
A Conference Archives Committee composed of
nine delegates (5 from Panel 48 and 4 from Panel 49) meet at the 49th
GSC as a secondary committee assignment and that the committee meet jointly with
the Trustee’s Archives Committee.
·
Continuing development of the draft 4th
edition Big Book keeping in mind the 1995 Advisory Action.
1999
Apr. 18-24, 49th GSC
recommended that:
·
The Trustee’s Archives Committee review the
Archives Handbook and consider the need for any changes and/or an Archives Kit.
2000
Apr 30-May 6, 50th GSC.
July,
65th anniversary and 11th International Convention held at
Minneapolis, MN. Est. attendance 50,000.
2001
Apr. 22-28, 51st GSC.
Archives
WORKBOOK published as a service piece.
Nov. 1,
4th edition of Alcoholics Anonymous published. It contained 24
new personal stories. (GSO)
Estimated AA membership in 2001: 2,215,000 members in 100,000 groups. (GSO)
Estimated AFG membership in 2001: 600,000 members in 26,500 groups. (AFG
pamphlet AR-2)
Distribution of the book Alcoholics Anonymous reached the 22 million
mark. (NG 268)
2002
Apr. 21-27, 52nd GSC.
Feb. 9,
death of Sue Smith Windows, Dr. Bob's and Anne’s adopted daughter.
2003
Apr. 27-May 3, 53rd GSC.
2004
Apr. 18-24, 54th GSC.
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