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The history of A.A.
A.A.
had its beginnings in 1935 at Akron, Ohio, as the outcome
of a meeting between Bill W., a New York stockbroker, and
Dr. Bob S., an Akron surgeon. Both had been hopeless alcoholics.
Prior
to that time, Bill and Dr. Bob had each been in contact
with the Oxford Group, a mostly nonalcoholic fellowship
that emphasized universal spiritual values in daily living.
In that period, the Oxford Group in the New York, East Coast
area were headed by the noted Episcopal clergyman, Dr. Samuel
Shoemaker. Under this spiritual influence, and with the
help of an old-time friend, Ebby T., Bill had gotten sober
and had then maintained his recovery by working with other
alcoholics, though none of these had actually recovered.
Meanwhile, Dr. Bob's Oxford Group membership at Akron had
not helped him enough to achieve sobriety.
When
Dr. Bob and Bill finally met, the effect on the doctor was
immediate. This time, he found himself face to face with
a fellow sufferer who had made good. Bill emphasized that
alcoholism was a malady of mind, emotions and body. This
all-important fact he had learned from Dr. William D. Silkworth
of Towns Hospital in New York, where Bill had often been
a patient. Though a physician, Dr. Bob had not known alcoholism
to be a disease. Responding to Bill's convincing ideas,
he soon got sober, never to drink again. The founding spark
of A.A. had been struck.
Both
men immediately set to work with alcoholics at Akron's City
Hospital, where one patient quickly achieved complete sobriety.
Though the name Alcoholics Anonymous had not yet been coined,
these three men actually made up the nucleus of the first
A.A. group.
In
the fall of 1935, a second group of alcoholics slowly took
shape in New York. A third appeared at Cleveland in 1939.
It had taken over four years to produce 100 sober alcoholics
in the three founding groups.
Early
in 1939, the Fellowship published its basic textbook, Alcoholics
Anonymous. The text, written by Bill, explained A.A.'s philosophy
and methods, the core of which was the now well-known Twelve
Steps of recovery.
The
book was also reinforced by case histories of some thirty
recovered members. From this point, A.A.'s development was
rapid.
Also
in 1939, the Cleveland Plain Dealer carried a series of
articles about A.A., supported by warm editorials. The Cleveland
group of only twenty members was deluged by countless pleas
for help. Alcoholics sober only a few weeks were set to
work on brand-new cases. This was a new departure, and the
results were fantastic. A few months later, Cleveland's
membership had expanded to 500. For the first time, it was
shown that sobriety could be mass-produced.
Meanwhile,
in New York, Dr. Bob and Bill had in 1938 organized an over-all
trusteeship for the budding Fellowship. Friends of John
D. Rockefeller Jr. became board members alongside a contingent
of A.A.s. This board was named The Alcoholic Foundation.
However, all efforts to raise large amounts of money failed,
because Mr. Rockefeller had wisely concluded that great
sums might spoil the infant society. Nevertheless, the foundation
managed to open a tiny office in New York to handle inquiries
and to distribute the A.A. book - an enterprise which, by
the way, had been mostly financed by the A.A.s themselves.
The
book and the new office were quickly put to use. An article
about A.A. was carried by Liberty magazine in the fall of
1939, resulting in some 800 urgent calls for help. In 1940,
Mr. Rockefeller gave a dinner for many of his prominent
New York friends to publicize A.A. This brought yet another
flood of pleas. Each inquiry received a personal letter
and a small pamphlet. Attention was also drawn to the book
Alcoholics Anonymous, which soon moved into brisk circulation.
Aided by mail from New York, and by A.A. travelers from
already-established centers, many new groups came alive.
At the year's end, the membership stood at 2,000.
Then,
in March 1941, the Saturday Evening Post featured an excellent
article about A.A., and the response was enormous. By the
close of that year, the membership had jumped to 6,000,
and the number of groups multiplied in proportion. Spreading
across the U.S. and Canada, the Fellowship mushroomed.
By
1950, 100,000 recovered alcoholics could be found worldwide.
Spectacular though this was, the period 1940-1950 was nonetheless
one of great uncertainty. The crucial question was whether
all those mercurial alcoholics could live and work together
in groups. Could they hold together and function effectively?
This was the unsolved problem. Corresponding with thousands
of groups about their problems became a chief occupation
of the New York headquarters.
By
1946, however, it had already become possible to draw sound
conclusions about the kinds of attitude, practice and function
that would best suit A.A.'s purpose. Those principles, which
had emerged from strenuous group experience, were codified
by Bill in what are today the Twelve Traditions of Alcoholics
Anonymous. By 1950, the earlier chaos had largely disappeared.
A successful formula for A.A. unity and functioning had
been achieved and put into practice.
During
this hectic ten-year period, Dr. Bob devoted himself to
the question of hospital care for alcoholics, and to their
indoctrination with A.A. principles. Large numbers of alcoholics
flocked to Akron to receive hospital care at St. Thomas,
a Catholic hospital. Dr. Bob became a member of its staff.
Subsequently, he and the remarkable Sister M. Ignatia, also
of the staff, cared for and brought A.A. to some 5,000 sufferers.
After Dr. Bob's death in 1950, Sister Ignatia continued
to work at Cleveland's Charity Hospital, where she was assisted
by the local groups and where 10,000 more sufferers first
found A.A. This set a fine example of hospitalization wherein
A.A. could cooperate with both medicine and religion.
In
this same year of 1950, A.A. held its first International
Convention at Cleveland. There, Dr. Bob made his last appearance
and keyed his final talk to the need of keeping A.A. simple.
Together with all present, he saw the Twelve Traditions
of Alcoholics Anonymous enthusiastically adopted for the
permanent use of the A.A. Fellowship throughout the world.
(He died on November 16, 1950.)
The
following year witnessed still another significant event.
The New York office had greatly expanded its activities,
and these now consisted of public relations, advice to new
groups, services to hospitals, prisons, Loners, and Internationalists,
and cooperation with other agencies in the alcoholism field.
The headquarters was also publishing "standard"
A.A. books and pamphlets, and it supervised their translation
into other tongues. At the same time, the international
magazine, the A.A. Grapevine, had achieved a large circulation.
These and many other activities had become indispensable
for A.A. as a whole.
Nevertheless,
these vital services were still in the hands of an isolated
board of trustees, whose only link to the Fellowship had
been Bill and Dr. Bob. As the co-founders had foreseen years
earlier, it became absolutely necessary to link A.A.'s world
trusteeship (now the General Service Board of Alcoholics
Anonymous) with the Fellowship that it served. Delegates
from all states and provinces of the U.S. and Canada were
forthwith called in. Thus composed, this body for world
service first met in 1951. Despite earlier misgivings, the
gathering was a great success. For the first time, the remote
trusteeship became directly accountable to A.A. as a whole.
The A.A. General Service Conference had been created, and
A.A.'s over-all functioning was thereby assured for the
future.
A
second International Convention was held in St. Louis in
1955 to celebrate the Fellowship's 20th anniversary. The
General Service Conference had by then completely proved
its worth. Here, on behalf of A.A.'s old-timers, Bill turned
the future care and custody of A.A. over to the Conference
and its trustees. At this moment, the Fellowship went on
its own; A.A. had come of age.
Had
it not been for A.A.'s early friends, Alcoholics Anonymous
might never have come into being. And without its host of
well-wishers who have since given of their time and effort
- particularly those friends of medicine, religion, and
world communications - A.A. could never have grown and prospered.
The Fellowship here records its constant gratitude.
It
was on January 24, 1971, that Bill, a victim of pneumonia,
died in Miami Beach, Florida, where - seven months earlier
- he had delivered at the 35th Anniversary International
Convention what proved to be his last words to fellow A.A.s:
"God bless you and Alcoholics Anonymous forever."
Since
then, A.A. has become truly global, and this has revealed
that A.A.'s way of life can today transcend most barriers
of race, creed and language. A World Service Meeting, started
in 1969, has been held biennially since 1972. Its locations
alternate between New York and overseas. It has met in London,
England; Helsinki, Finland; San Juan del Rio, Mexico; Guatemala
City, Guatemala; Munich, Germany and Cartagena, Colombia.
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