Thursday, November 22, 2012

Alcoholics Anonymous History


Alcoholics Anonymous History

How to Find It – Where to Learn It

with

Dick B.

 

© 2012 Anonymous. All rights reserved

 

(A thorough, accurate, comprehensive, complete summary of the many elements comprising the Alcoholics Anonymous History picture from the 1850’s through publication of the original 1939 edition of Alcoholics Anonymous.)

 

This account intends to focus readers on accurate, comprehensive Alcoholics Anonymous History—particularly as it extends from the pre-A.A. Christian roots of the 1850’s to the period just after Bill Wilson published his First Edition of Alcoholics Anonymous in 1939. It will lay out the history in various chunks that can be examined and studied as time permits and that should prove useful to the recovery community.

 

[Preliminary Draft November 22, 2012]

 

The final draft will contain full bibliographic references and publication data soon

 

 

Let’s Begin with Alcoholics Anonymous General Services Conference-Approved Literature

 

I began my own search for Alcoholics Anonymous History by reading all the available, accurate, relevant literature published by A.A. itself. I still get grounded there and recommend looking at A.A. literature first—instead of speculating on what A.A. is or isn’t. Once that is done, the reader can fill in the holes, straighten out the distortions, and find out what most in the recovery community have simply not heard.

 

And the recommended books, in the order of the publication, are:

 

Alcoholics Anonymous, 1st ed., Works Publishing Company, 1939 (non-approved).

“RHS” The A.A. Grapevine issue dedicated to the memory of the Co-Founder of Alcoholics Anonymous, DR. BOB, 1951.

Alcoholics Anonymous, 2d ed., 1956.

Alcoholics Anonymous Comes of Age, 1957.

The Co-Founders of Alcoholics Anonymous: Biographical Sketches Their Last Major Talks (Pamphlet P-53), 1972, 1975.

Alcoholics Anonymous, 3rd ed., 1976.

DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers, 1980.

“Pass It On,” 1984.

The Language of the Heart: Bill W.’s Grapevine Writings, 1988.

Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th ed., 2001.

Experience, Strength, and Hope

 

Next, Look at Reliable Alcoholics Anonymous History Books and Other Literature that Can Be Helpful

 

Piece by piece, manuscript by manuscript, research trip by research trip, archive by archive, library by library, interview by interview, Alcoholics Anonymous History—in its full form, and in a form that is comprehensive, accurate, and able to be used and applied in recovery today—emerged from and is reported in the following Alcoholics Anonymous History literature: 

 

Alcoholics Anonymous: The Original 1939 Edition, Introduction by Dick B., Dover

Publications, 2011.

 

AA of Akron Pamphlets, n.d., – Available at Akron Intergroup Office (revised several times)

 

Wally P., But for the Grace of God, 1995, 30-46.

 

A Guide to the Twelve Steps of Alcoholics Anonymous

 

A Manual for Alcoholics Anonymous

 

Second Reader for Alcoholics Anonymous

 

Spiritual Milestones in Alcoholics Anonymous

 

 

Autobiographies of Bill Wilson:

 

Bill W.: My First 40 Years

 

Chapter 1 “Bill’s Story,” Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th ed., 2001, 1-16.

 

The many manuscripts by Bill that I found at Stepping Stones, most of which are

 

discussed in Dick B., Turning Point: A History of Early A.A.’s Spiritual

 

            Roots and Successes, 1997.

 

 

Biographies of Bill W.:

 

Dick B., The Conversion of Bill W., 2006.

 

Susan Cheever, My Name is Bill W., 2004.

 

Francis Hartigan, Bill W., A Biography. . . , 2000.

 

Matthew Raphael, Bill W. and Mr. Wilson, 2000.

 

Tom White, Bill W.: A Different Kind of Hero, 2003.

 

Nan Robertson, Getting Better Inside Alcoholics Anonymous, 1988.

 

Robert Thomsen, Bill W., 1975

 

 

Biographies of Dr. Bob

 

RHS, 1951.

 

The Co-Founders of Alcoholics Anonymous: Biographical Sketches, P-53.

 

“Doctor Bob’s Nightmare,” Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th ed., 171-181.

 

DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers, 1980.

 

Dick B. and Ken B.,

 

The Dick B. Christian Recovery Guide, 3rd ed., 2010.

 

Dr. Bob of Alcoholics Anonymous,

 

Dick B.,

 

The Akron Genesis of Alcoholics Anonymous, 1998.

 

Dr. Bob and His Library, 1998.

 

“Alcoholics Anonymous and Dr. Bob,” http://mauihistorian.blogspot.com/

 

“16 Specific Practices Associated with the Original Akron A.A. "Christian

 

Fellowship" Program,” http://internationalchristianrecoverycoaliti.blogspot.com

 

                        “Honest With Yourself, Pray. Alcoholics Anonymous Advise,” The Tidings,

 

                                    Page 17, Friday, March 26, 1948.

 

D. J. Defoe, "I Saw Religion Remake a Drunkard" in Your Faith (September

 

1939), 84-88. (Your Faith is "a McFadden Publication")--Dr. Bob is called "Dr. X" in this article. http://www.silkworth.net/aahistory/drbob/drbob_interview_fm_0939.html

 

 

Biographical on A.A. Number Three, Bill D.

 

Dick B. and Ken B., The Dick B. Christian Recovery Guide, 3rd ed., 2010.

 

“Alcoholics Anonymous Number Three,” Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th ed., 182-192

 

“Pass It On,” 356-357.

 

“Bill Dotson: A.A Number Three’s Recovery by the Power of God”

 

http://MauiHistorian.Blogspot.com

 

“Bill Dotson – AA’s Number Three”

 

http://silkworth.net/aahistory/print/bdotson2.html

 

“Bill Dotson: A.A. Number 3”

 

            http://www.barefootsworld.net/aabilld-aa3.html

 

Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th ed., 2001,

 

 

Biographical on Rowland Hazard

 

[Rowland had been told by Dr. Carl Jung that he had the mind of a chronic alcoholic but could possibly be cured by a conversion. Rowland returned to America, became associated with the Oxford Group, studied with Rev. Sam Shoemaker, and became active in Shoemaker’s Calvary Church. Rowland had been impressed by the simplicity of the early Christian teachings as advocated by the Oxford Group. Rowland made a decision for Jesus Christ. Rowland and two other Oxford Group friends (Cebra Graves and Shep Cornell) had decided to witness to Ebby Thacher and told Ebby many Oxford Group principles and practices. Ebby, an old drinking friend of Bill Wilson’s who had become a “real alcoholic” recalled that two of Rowland’s Oxford Group friends(an old friend of Bill Wilson’s and a “real alcoholic”)  had told Ebby “things they had gotten out of the Oxford Group based on the life of Christ, biblical times.” Ebby said: “It was what I had been taught as a  child and what I inwardly believed, but had lain aside” The men had suggested that Ebby call on God and try prayer. Rowland and the two others lodged Ebby in Shoemaker’s Calvary Mission. Occasionally, a religious writer—either disdainful of, or unfamiliar with, A.A. facts and origins will say: “Alcoholics Anonymous does not use the words sin or conversion” See Linda Mercadante, Victims & Sinners, 1996, 70. Or, as she does on 91: :God does not ask any more than simple acknowledgement of divine existence.” The reader should look at A.A.’s Third Step prayer—“May I do Thy will always” and A.A.’s Seventh Step prayer—“Grant me strength, as I go out from here, to do your bidding. Amen.” Then spend a moment with Exodus 15:26, Exodus 20:1-17—the Ten Commandments; Matthew 22:36-40—the two Great Commandments; and James 2:8-11; and read all of Hebrews 11:6 ]

 

            T. Willard Hunter, ‘IT STARTED RIGHT THERE,” 2006

 

            Bill C. and Jay S., Kitchen Table A.A. Sponsorship Workshop, Carlsbad, 2007

 

            Jay Stinnett, “Why Our Lives Were Saved,” A.A. Spiritual History Workshop,

 

                        Reykjovik, Iceland, March 11, 2007.

 

            “Pass It On,” 1984.

 

            Mel B., Ebby: The Man Who Sponsored Bill W., 1998.

 

            Dick B., The Conversion of Bill W.

 

Bill W. My First 40 Years

 

Alcoholics Anonymous Comes of Age

 

 

Biographical on William D. Silkworth, M.D.

 

[Silkworth’s name itself may not be well known to most AAs. But they certainly know of the “Doctor’s Opinion” written by Silkworth as an introduction to their Big Book. And they probably have grasped the fact that Silkworth established in Bill Wilson’ thinking that alcoholism was a disease—an allergy of the body kicked into gear by an obsession of the mind. But, as Silkworth’s biographer observed after he had researched Silkworth’s life and papers, Silkworth has not been given credit for the role he played in convincing Bill and others that they could be cured of their alcoholism by the “Great Physician,” Jesus Christ. And that solution—long since tossed aside before the Big Book was published--became the foundation of Bill’s conviction that “conversion” was the answer to alcoholism and that it was manifested by a “spiritual experience.” “Divine Aid,” Bill was still calling it in his address at the Shrine Auditorium in 1948 with Dr. Bob on the stage with him as well. The information about the Great Physician and cure was conveyed to Bill on his third hospitalization when he was given a virtual death sentence promise if Bill did not quit drinking immediately. The specifics of Silkworth’s advice on alcoholism was confirmed by Dr. Norman Vincent Peale.]

 

Dale Mitchel, Silkworth: The Little Doctor Who Loved Drunks

 

Dick B., The Conversion of Bill W.

 

Dick B. and Ken B., The Christian Recovery Guide, 3rd ed., 2010

 

Bill W., My First 40 Years, 2001

 

Norman Vincent Peale, The Positive Power of Jesus Christ

 

Biographical on Edwin Throckmorton Thacher, “Ebby,” Bill’s Sponsor

 

[While Ebby was in Calvary Mission, he went to the altar and made a decision for Jesus Christ. He then visited Bill as he himself had been visited by Rowland Hazard, Cebra Graves, and Shep Cornell. Ebby told Bill he had “found religion,” and that he had tried prayer—something he specifically recommended to Bill Wilson. Bill specifically concluded that Ebby had been “reborn.” But taking no chances, Bill went to Shoemaker’s Calvary Church, listened to Ebby’s testimony, and then decided that if the Great Physician had helped Ebby, he (Bill) could probably receive the same help. Armed with Silkworth’s advice and Ebby’s eye-witness testimony, Bill went to Calvary Mission himself. He went to the altar. He made his own decision for Jesus Christ. He quickly wrote, “For sure, I had been born again.” And then, still drunk and still despondent, Bill made his way to Towns Hospital where he decided to call on the Great Physician and had the experience—which Silkworth called a conversion experience—and sensed the presence of God in his room. And never drank again.]

 

T. Willard Hunter, “IT STARTED RIGHT THERE.” 2006

 

Bill W., My First 40 Years,

 

Dale Mitchel, Silkworth: The Little Doctor Who Loved Drunks.

 

Mel B. Ebby: The Man Who Sponsored Bill W., 1998

 

“Pass It On.”

 

Alcoholics Anonymous Comes of Age

 

Richard M. Dubiel, The Road to Fellowship, 2004. [Rowland Hazard] “must have

had some sort of influence on early A.A.’s who knew about him, whether at first or second hand. . . it is clear that behind Ebby Thatcher [sic], the messenger who brought the message of salvation to Bill Wilson in the kitchen of Bill’s apartment in November 1934, lay the figure of Rowland Hazard III, the mysterious messenger behind the messenger.” 79-80.

 

Dick B., The Conversion of Bill W

 

Dick B. and Ken B., The Dick B. Christian Recovery Guide, 3rd ed..

 

 

Biographical on Dr. Bob’s Wife, Anne Ripley Smith

 

Dick B., Anne Smith’s Journal, 1933-1939, 3rd ed., 1998

 

Dick B., The Akron Genesis of Alcoholics Anonymous, 2d ed., 1998

 

Bob Smith and Sue Smith Windows, Children of the Healer, 1992

 

Charlotte Hunter, Billye Jones, Joan Zieger, Women Pioneers in 12 Step

 

 Recovery, 1999

 

 

Biography on Bill W.’s Wife

 

Lois Remembers, 1979.

 

William Borchert, When Love is Not Enough: The Lois Wilson Story

 

 

Biography on Henrietta Buckler Seiberling

 

Dick B., Henrietta B. Seiberling: Ohio’s Lady with a Cause

Charlotte Hunter, Billye Jones, Joan Zieger, Women Pioneers

Dick B., The Akron Genesis of Alcoholics Anonymous, 2d, ed,

 

 

Biography of T. Henry and Clarace Williams

          

Dick B., The Akron Genesis of Alcoholics Anonymous, 2d ed.

 

 

Biographical on Dr. Frank N.D. Buchman, Founder of the Oxford Group

 

Garth Lean, Frank Buchman: A Life, 1985

 

Frank Buchman, Remaking the World, 1961

 

H. W.  “Bunny” Austin, Frank Buchman as I Knew Him, 1975

 

Peter Howard,

 

            That Man Frank Buchman, 1946

 

            The World Rebuilt: The true story of Frank Buchman. . . , 1951

 

            Frank Buchman’s Secret, 1961

 

R.C. Mowat, The Message of Frank Buchman, n.d.

 

T. Willard Hunter, World Changing Through Life Changing, 1977

 

Alan Thornhill, The Significance of the Life of Frank Buchman, 1952

 

 

 

Biographical on Rev. Samuel M. Shoemaker, Jr

 

Dick B.,

 

New Light on Alcoholism: God, Sam Shoemaker, and A.A., 2d ed.

 

Good Morning!: Quiet Time, Morning Watch, Meditation, and Early A.A.

 

Irving Harris,

 

            The Breeze of the Spirit, 1978.

 

            “S.M. S.—Man of God for Our Time,” Faith at Work, 1964.

 

Norman Vincent Peale, “The Unforgettable Sam Shoemaker,” Faith at Work,

 

1964.

 

Louis W. Pitt, “New Life, New Reality: A Brief Picture of S.M.S.’s Influence,

 

                                    Faith at Work, 1950

 

Sherwood S. Day, “Always Ready, S.M.S. as a Friend, Calvary Evangel, 1950.

 

Helen Smith Shoemaker, I Stand by the Door, 1967

 

Bill Wilson, “I Stand by the Door,” The A.A. Grapevine, 1967

 

“Ten of America’s Greatest Preachers,” Newsweek, 1955,

 

“Calvary Mission, “ Pamphlet, NY Calvary Episcopal Church, n.d.

 

 John Potter Cuyler, Jr., Calvary Church in Action, 1934.

 

 Samuel M  Shoemaker, Jr.

 

So I Stand by the Door and Other Verses, Pittsburgh, Calvary

 

Rectory.1958

           

            My Life Work and My Will, Pamphlet, 1930

 

            “A First Century Christian Fellowship,” Churchman, 1928

 

            Calvary Church Yesterday and Today, 1936.

 

            “How to Find God,” The Calvary Evangel, 1957.

 

            Get Changed; Get Together; Get Going: A History of the Pittsburgh

 

 Experiment, n.d.

 

 

 

Biographical on Clarence H Snyder

 

Three Clarence Snyder Sponsee Old-timers and Their Wives, Comp & ed. by

 

Dick B., Our A.A. Legacy to the Faith Community: A Twelve-Step Guide

 

For Those Who Want to Believe, 2005

 

DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers, 1980.

 

Alcoholics Anonymous Comes of Age

 

Clarence Snyder,

 

           Going through the Steps, 2d ed., 1985

 

           My Higher Power-The Light Bulb, 1985

 

Mitchell K., How It Worked: The Story of Clarence H Snyder and the Early Days

 

 of Alcoholics Anonymous in Cleveland, 1997.

 

Dick B., That Amazing Grace, 1996.

 

 

Biographical on Sister Ignatia

 

[Though author Mary Darrah endeavors to select an earlier date for the A.A.-Ignatia connection, it is clear that Ignatia came on the A.A. scene about mid-August 1935. And her contributions were with Dr. Bob at St. Thomas Hospital from that point on. Her book makes clear that Father John C. Ford, S.J. had—like Father Dowling, S.J.—had a real part in editing Bill Wilson’s Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions and his Alcoholics Anonymous Comes of Age—both published in the 1950’s]

 

Mary Darrah, Sister Ignatia, 1992, 13, 25-26, 33-37.

 

DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers, 1980

 

 

 

Biographical on Father Ed Dowling, S.J.

 

[Though Dowling did not meet Bill until the winter of 1940, he became a friend and sponsor to Bill, and edited Bill Wilson’s Alcoholics Anonymous Comes of Age and Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions]

 

Robert Fitzgerald, S.J., The Soul of Sponsorship, 1995. See 55-66, 89]

 

“Pass It On,” 1980, 240-243, 281-282, 354, 371, 387.

 

 

Central Bulletin, Volumes I – III, Cleveland Central Committee, Dec. 1942-Dec. 1945

 

 

Nell Wing, Grateful to Have Been There, 1992.

 

 

Stewart C., A Reference Guide to the Big Book of Alcoholics Anonymous, 1986.

 

 

Bill Pittman and Dick B., Courage to Change: The Christian Roots of the Twelve Step

Movement, 1994

 

Bill Pittman, AA The Way It Began. 1988

 

 

How to Study and Apply the Historical Elements Today

 

Dick B.,

 

Utilizing Early AA.’s Spiritual Roots for Recovery Today, 2000.

 

By The Power of God: A Guide to Early A.A. Groups & Forming Similar Groups

 

Today, 2000.

 

God and Alcoholism: Our Growing Opportunity in the 21st Century, 2002

 

Cured!: Proven Help for Alcoholics and Addicts, 2d ed, 2006

 

Twelve Steps For You: Take the Twelve Steps with the Big Book, A.A. History,

 

 and the Good Book at Your Side, 4th ed., 2005.

 

Dick B. and Ken B., Stick with the Winners! How to Conduct  More Effective 12-Step Recovery

 

Meetings Using Conference-Approved Literature: A Dick B. Guide for Christian Leaders and

 

Workers in the Recovery Arena, 2012.

 

 

Now to Alcoholics Anonymous History on the Origins of A.A., Item by Item

 

Dick B.,

 

 

Introduction to the Sources and Founding of Alcoholics Anonymous, 2007

 

Real Twelve Step Fellowship History: The Old School A.A. You May Not Know, 2006/

 

Making Known the Biblical History and Roots of Alcoholics Anonymous, 3rd ed.

 

 2006

 

 The First Nationwide Alcoholics Anonymous History Conference, 2d ed., 2006.

 

 Turning Point: A History of Early A.A.’s Spiritual Roots and Successes, 1997.

 

 

Mel B.

 

New Wine: The Spiritual Roots of the Twelve Step Miracle, 1991

 

My Search for Bill W., 2000.

 

 

Alcoholics Anonymous History: Rev. Samuel M. Shoemaker, Jr.

 

Dick B., New Light on Alcoholism: God, Sam Shoemaker, and A.A., 2d ed., 1999.

 

Bill W., I Stand by the Door, The A.A. Grapevine, 1967.

 

Charles Taylor Knippel, Samuel M. Shoemaker’s Theological Influence on

 

William G. Wilson’s Twelve Step Spiritual Program of Recovery, 1987

 

Helen Smith Shoemaker, I Stand by the Door: The Life of Sam Shoemaker,1967.

 

 John Potter Cuyler, Jr., Calvary Church in Action, 1934.

 

W. Irving Harris, The Breeze of the Spirit, 1978.

 

Samuel M. Shoemaker, Calvary Church Yesterday and Today, 1936,

 

Samuel M. Shoemaker, Realizing Religion, 1923

 

 

Alcoholics Anonymous History: the Oxford Group

 

Dick B., The Oxford Group & Alcoholics Anonymous, Newton ed., 1998.

 

Frank N. D. Buchman, Remaking the World, 1961.

 

Garth Lean,

 

Frank Buchman: A Life, 1985.

 

Good God, It Works, 1974.

 

James D. Newton, Uncommon Friends, 1987.

 

Henry B. Wright, The Will of God and a Man’s Life Work, 1909.

 

Howard A. Walter, Soul Surgery, 1928.

 

Harold Begbie, Life Changers, 1927.

 

Howard J. Rose, The Quiet Time, 1937.

 

Cecil Rose, When Man Listens, 1937.

 

Harry J. Almond, Foundations for Faith, 1980.

 

Peter Howard, That Man Frank Buchman, 1946.

 

Robert E. Speer, The Principles of Jesus, 1902.

 

B. H. Streeter, The God Who Speaks, 1930.

 

Sherwood Sunderland Day, The Principles of the Group, n.d.

 

T. Willard Hunter,

 

It Started Right There, 2006.

 

World Changing Through Life-Changing, 1977.

 

The Layman with a Notebook, What is the Oxford Group? 1933.

 

Kenneth Belden,

 

            Meeting Moral Re-Armament, 1979.

 

            Beyond the Satellites: Is God Speaking? Are We Listening, 1987.

 

 

Alcoholics Anonymous History and the “Temperance Movement”

 

[Temperance, Abstinence, and the Widespread Concerns of Society: Bill Wilson had made such a fuss over the “failures” of the Washingtonian Movement that it can be said that his A.A. took no position on “liquor” issues. But the Washingtonian Movement was but a speck on the temperance front. It lasted only a short time. It was dismissed by many as not a religious movement, and it is fair to say that its emphasis was on “pledges” and not on healing by God. Nonetheless, the backdrop of Dr. Bob’s and Bill’s boyhood days was temperance—abstinence from drink—however much people may have disagreed on what was really involved—religion, morality, social problems. There are several pieces of literature that may or may not be known by, or of interest to those who might just dismiss the whole picture by saying, “We don’t want to be like the Washingtonians. They failed.” But the failure occurred before the major influences on A.A. background got under way. See Dick B. and Ken B., Dr. Bob of Alcoholics Anonymous: His Excellent Training in the Bible as a Youngster in Vermont; Dick B., The Conversion of Bill W.]

 

Harry S. Warner, Rev. Francis W. McPeek, and E.M. Jellinek, “Lecture 19,

                                                                                                     

Philosophy of the Temperance Movement” Alcohol, Science and Society,

 

As given at the Yale Summer School of Alcohol Studies, 1945, 267-285; McPeek: “I don’t believe that the temperance movement can be understood in any sense unless the framework in which it developed is understood, and this framework is essentially Christian.,” 279.

 

Rev. Roland H. Bainton, “Lecture 20, The Churches and Alcohol, Alcohol,

 

Science and Society,” 287-298

 

Rev. Francis W. McPeek, “Lecture 26 – The Role of Religious Bodies in the

 

Treatment of Inebriety in the United States, Alcohol, Science and Society,” 1945, 406-411.

 

Jared C. Lobdell, This Strange Illness: Alcoholism and Bill W., 2004, 30-38.

 

 William L White, Slaying the Dragon, 1998, 4-14.

 

 

 

Alcoholics Anonymous History: the Co-Founder Dr. Bob’s Christian Roots and Upbringing in Vermont

 

 

Dick B. and Ken B., Dr. Bob of Alcoholics Anonymous: His Excellent Training in

 

            the Good Book as a Youngster in Vermont, 2008..

 

 

[The Town of St. Johnsbury—Dr. Bob’s birthplace]

 

Edward Taylor Fairbanks, The Town of St. Johnsbury, Vt; A Review

 

Of  One Hundred Twenty-Five Years to the Anniversary Pageant, 1912

 

Claire Dunne Johnson, “I See By the Paper,” 1987.

 

 

                        [The People, including the Fairbanks family and the Smith family]

 

Albert Nelson Marquis, Who’s Who in New England

 

Charles G. Ullery, Men of Vermont, 1894.

 

Hiram Carleton, Geneological and Family History of the State of

 

 Vermont, Vol I.

 

Lorenzo Sayles Fairbanks, Geneology of the Fairbanks Family… 1897

 

The “Fairbanks Papers” 1815-1889,.

 

William H. Jeffrey, Successful Vermonters, 1904.

 

                                   

 

                        [Congregationalism and North Congregational Church of St.Johnsbury]

 

 John M. Comstock, The Congregational Churches of Vermont and Their

 

Ministry, 1762-1942. 1942.

 

 John E. Nutting, Becoming the United Church of Christ in Vermont, 1995

 

 History of North Congregational Church, 2007

 

 Arthur Fairbanks Stone, North Congregational Church, St. Johnsbury,

 

 Vermont, 1825-1942, 1942

 

 

 

                        [Young People’s Society of Christian Endeavor]

 

Francis E. Clark.

 

Memoirs of Many Men in Many Lands, An Autobiography, 1922

 

Christian Endeavor in All Lands, 1906

 

World Wide Endeavor: The Story of the Young People’s Society of  Christian Endeavor and in All Lands, 1895.

 

Amos R. Wells, Expert Endeavor, A Textbook of Christian Endeavor Methods and Principles, 1911.

 

John R. Clements, The Francis E. Clark Year Book: A Collection of Living

Paragraphs From Addresses, Books, and Magazine Articles by the Founder of the Young People’s Society of Christian Endeavor,  1904.

 

John Franklin Cowan, New Life in the Old Prayer Meeting, 1906.

 

 

 

                        [St. Johnsbury Academy]

 

Arthur Fairbanks et. al. [including Dr. Bob’s mother], An Historical  Sketch of  St. Johnsbury Academy 1842-1922

 

Charles Edward Russell, Bare Hands and Stone Walls, 1933

 

Richard Beck, A Proud Tradition A Bright Future, 1992

 

Robert Miraldi, The Pen Is Mightier: The Muckraking Life of Charles

 

 Edward Russell, 2003.

 

 The Academy Student (1897), (1898)

 

 

 

                        [Young Men’s Christian Association]

 

Year Book of the Young Men’s Christian Association of North America,

 

1896

 

C. Howard Hopkins, John R. Mott, 1865-1955.

 

Laurence L. Doggett, History of the Young Men’s Christian Association

 

Richard C. Morse, History of the North American Young Men’s Christian

 

Associations, 1919.

 

Sherwood Eddy, A Century with Youth, 1884-1944, 1944

 

 

 

                        [Salvation Army]

 

[In Lecture 26, cited below, Rev. McPeek states: “Much work was done in the city missions and particularly by the Salvation Army. . . . Generally speaking. The Salvationists have capitalized on the same techniques that have made other reform programs work: (1) Insistence on total abstinence. (2)  reliance upon God. (3) the provision of new friendships among those who understand. (4) the opportunity to work with those who suffer from the same difficulty. (5) unruffled patience and consistent faith in the ability of the individual and the power of God to accomplish the desired ends.” 414-415]

 

William Booth, In Darkest England and the Way Out, 1890,

 

Harold Begbie,

 

 The Life of General William Booth: The Founder of the Salvation Army (Vol I and II), NY: MacMillan, 1920.

 

Twice Born Men, 1909

 

Rev. Francis W. McPeek, “Lecture 26  - The Role of Religious Bodies in

 

the Treatment of Inebriety in the United States,” Alcohol, Science and Society, 1945, 403-418.

 

Howard Clinebell, Understanding and Counseling Persons with Alcohol,

 

 Drug, and Behavioral Addictions, 1998, 184-194.

 

 

 

Alcoholics Anonymous History: the Christian Upbringing of Co-Founder Bill Wilson

 

 

Dick B., The Conversion of Bill W.

 

[The conversion to God through Christ hat cured Bill Wilson’s grandfather Willie of alcoholism]

 

            Francis Hartigan, Bill W.: A Biography…, 10-11

 

            Robert Thomsen, Bill W., 14

 

            Bill W., My First 40 Years, 6

 

            Susan Cheever, My Name is Bill, 17.

 

 

 

[The Impact of the Great Evangelists]

 

Allen Folger, Twenty-Five Years as an Evangelist, 1906

 

Bob Holman, F. B. Meyer: “If I Had a Hundred Lives…,” 2007

 

Edgar J. Goodspeed, The Wonderful Career of Moody and Sankey in

 

 Great Britain and America, 1876.

 

Elmer Towns and Douglas Porter, The Ten Greatest Revivals Ever, 2000

 

J. Wilbur Chapman, Life and Work of Dwight L. Moody

 

Mark O. Guldseth, Streams, 1982.

 

 

[The Impact of Bill’s East Dorset Congregational Church]

 

Dick B. and Ken B., The Dick B. Christian Recovery Guide, 3rd ed,

 

Dick B., The Conversion of Bill W., 7-10, 27-28, 72-73

 

Susan Cheever, My Name is Bill W., 4, 44

 

Francis Hartigan, Bill W., 175

 

Robert Thomsen, Bill W., 15, 30-9. 200

 

 

[Bible study and prayer meetings in East Dorset, in the Congregational Church, and in a 4 year Bible study course at Burr and Burton Seminary in Manchester]

 

Dick B. and Ken B., The Dick B. Christian Recovery Guide, 3rd ed.

 

Susan Cheever, My Name is Bill, 37-38, 47-48.

 

Robert Thomsen, Bill W., 30-39, 200.

 

Frederica Templeton, The Castle in the Pasture

 

The First Congregational Church, Manchester, Vermont, 1784 - 1984

 

 

                        [Christian Revivals and Conversion Meetings Bill attended]

 

Bill Pittman, AA The Way It Began, 79

 

Francis Hartigan, Bill W., 10-11, 53, 58, 59

 

Matthew Raphael, Bill W., 77

 

Susan Cheever, My Name is Bill, 44-45,

 

Mel B., New Wine, 127-28

 

See also the impact of The Great Awakening of 1875, which had transformed the church situation in St. Johnsbury in Dr. Bob’s youth and was recognized in Manchester as a zealous season of evangelism and conversions. The First Congregational Church, Manchester, Vermont, 64.

 

[The continued impact on Bill’s life of daily chapel he and Ebby Thacher attended at Norwich Academy]

 

The History of Norwich University 1912-1965. Volume IV of the General History

 

 

[Gospel Rescue Missions]

 

 D. Samuel Hopkins Hadley, Down in Water Street: A Story of Sixteen Years Life and Work in Water Street Mission: A Sequel to the Life of Jerry McAuley, n.d.

 

J. Wilbur Chapman, S.H. Hadley of Water Street, 1906.

 

“Pass It On,”

 

William James. The Varieties of Religious Experience, 1990, 188-9, 146

 

John Potter Cuyler, Jr., Calvary Church in Action

 

Howard Clinebell, Understanding and Counseling, 172-193

 

 

 

[Burr and Burton Seminary, the Manchester Congregational Church, Norwich University]

 

 Dick B. and Ken B., The Dick B. Christian Recovery Guide

 

 Bill W.: My First Forty Years

 

 Frederica Templeton, The Castle in the Pasture: Portrait of Burr and Burton Academy, 2005,, 25, 42. 44, 56, 67

 

 

 

                        [Young Men’s Christian Association-Bill as President, girl friend as YWCA

 

President]

 

 Bill W., My First Forty Years, 29

 

 Robert Thomsen, Bill W., 57

 

 Frederica Templeton, The Castle in the Pasture, 78-79, 69

 

 

 

[Bill’s return to Jesus Christ, the “Great Physician,” Who can cure alcoholics].

 

Dick B.,

 

Turning Point, 99-100.

 

            The Conversion of Bill W., 47, 94,

 

            A New Way In: Telling the Truth, 61-66.

 

Norman Vincent Peale, The Positive Power of Jesus Christ. 1980.

 

Dale Mitchel, Silkworth, The Little Doctor Who Loved Drunks

 

Alcoholics Anonymous Comes of Age, 60-63.

 

Mel B.,

 

Ebby: The Man Who Sponsored Bill W.

 

New Wine: The Spiritual Roots of the Twelve Step Miracle

 

 “Lois Remembers: Searcy, Ebby, Bill & Early Days”: Recorded in Dallas Texas, June 29, 1973.

 

T. Willard Hunter, It Started Right There

 

Bill W., My First Forty Years

 

W. Irving Harris, The Breeze of the Spirit

 

“Pass It On”

 

William James, The Varieties of Religious Experience

 

 

 

[Bill Wilson’s first unsuccessful attempts for six months to carry a message]

 

William Borchert, When Love is Not Enough

 

Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th ed., 191.

 

Lois Remembers, 94-95

 

Alcoholics Anonymous Comes of Age, 64-65

 

The Co-Founders of Alcoholics Anonymous: Biographical Sketches Their Last Major Talks, 9-10, 26.

 

 

 

[Alcoholics Anonymous History – The Fellowship Begins]

 

 

 

How the First Three AAs Got Sober by simply turning to God for help.

 

 

The Bill W. Conversion and White Light Experience:

 

[As a youngster in Vermont, Bill had repeatedly heard the story of how his alcoholic grandfather Willie had been converted to God through Jesus Christ on a mountaintop next to Bill’s village. Willie was saved, said so, and never touched a drop during the remaining years of his life. And Bill was no stranger to revivals, conversion meetings, temperance meetings, and salvation teachings—the latter in his church and Sunday school]

 

(1) Dr. Carl Jung had told Rowland Hazard that he had the mind of a chronic alcoholic and that a conversion experience might heal him (2) Rowland Hazard made a decision for Jesus Christ and also joined the Oxford Group. (3) Rowland and two other Oxford Group friends told Bill Wilson’s long-time drinking friend Ebby Thacher the solution that Jung had proffered. Rowland taught him about the efficacy of prayer. He informed Ebby of a number of the Oxford Group’s Christian principles and told Ebby of Christian and Bible ideas Ebby had heard as a youth and still believed. Then Ebby was lodged in Calvary Rescue Mission in New York. (4) Meanwhile, Bill Wilson had made his third visit to Towns Hospital. Dr. William D. Silkworth, Bill’s psychiatrist, had a long talk. Silkworth had given Bill a virtual death sentence contingent upon his continuing to drink. Dr. Silkworth, a devout Christian and a long-time parishioner of Sam Shoemaker’s Calvary Church, told Bill Wilson that the “Great Physician” Jesus Christ could cure Bill. (5) In this same period, Ebby Thacher had made a decision for Jesus Christ at Calvary Mission, decided to witness to Bill, visited Bill, and told Bill what had happened at the Mission. (6) Bill decided to check out Ebby’s story and went to hear him give testimony at Calvary Church. (7) Bill decided that if the Great Physician had helped Ebby recover, he might help Bill. (8)  Bill W. accepted Jesus Christ at Calvary Mission, wrote in his autobiography that “For sure I had been born again.” (9) Bill continued to drink, became severely depressed, and thought,”If there be a Great Physician, I had better call on him.” (10) Bill staggered on to Towns Hospital drunk and very depressed and was hospitalized. (11) He said to himself, “I’ll do anything, anything at all. If there be a Great Physician, I’ll call on him.” (12) He cried out, “If there be a God let him show himself.” (13) He said: “The effect was, instant, electric. Suddenly my room blazed with an indescribably white light.” (14) He continued: “Then, seen in the mind’s eye, there was a mountain. I stood upon its summit where a great wind blew. A wind, not of air, but of spirit. In great, clean strength it blew right through me.” (15) :The light and the ecstasy subsided. He became more quiet. A great peace stole over him. (16) Then he became acutely conscious of a presence which seemed like a “veritable sea of living spirit.” (17) He thought, “This must be the great reality.” And in one account, he said this was “the God of the Scriptures.” And concluded: “Bill, you are a free man.”(18) He said, “I thanked my God who had given me a glimpse of His absolute Self. (19) He said that faith had suddenly appeared—no blind faith—but faith fortified by the consciousness of the presence of God. (20) Briefly He stopped doubting God and said “this great and sudden gift of grace has always been mine.” (21) He never drank again. (22) But he did have his “hour of doubt.” (23) Dr. Silkworth appeared and sat by Bill’s bed. Bill told Silkworth what had happened. Bill asked: “Doctor, is this real? Am I still perfectly sane?” (24) Sikworth assured him that he was sane. He said “You have had some kind of conversion experience.” (25) Ebby showed up at the hospital, agreed with Bill that he and Bill had a release that was a gift, real. He handed Bill a copy of a book by Professor William James. It was called “The Varieties of Religious Experience.” Bill he had read it “all day.”(26) The James book was filled with studies and stories of the cure of alcoholism at missions such as the one founded by Jerry McAuley at 316 Water Street in 1872, and later (in 1882) at 104 West Thirty-second Street, known as Cremorne Mission. In 1886, S.H. Hadley took charge of the Water Street Mission. Hadley had been converted at Jerry McAuley’s Cremorne Mission, and in the years of service in Water Street not less than seventy-five thousand persons came to the mission for help.  Hadley died in 1906. (27) Before his discharge from Towns Hospital in December of 1935, Wilson had been inspired to help drunks everywhere. (28) On his discharge, he raced feverishly to the streets, the missions, the hospitals, the Bowery, and flea bag hotels. He went with a Bible under his arm and insisted that drunks give their lives to God. (29) Bill’s story is briefly told as follows in the Big Book: “Henrietta, the Lord has been so wonderful to me curing me of this terrible disease that I just want to keep talking about it and telling people.” (30) But in his first six months of witnessing, Bill was unable to get a single person sober.]

 

 

 

The Dr. Bob Prayers and Deliverance

 

 

 

[Dr. Bob was born in St. Johnsbury, Vermont when the entire state was still swirling from the effect of “The Great Awakening of 1875 in St. Johnsbury.” His parents were married when the events were taking place. They taught Bob about salvation and the Word of God. He heard similar sermons and teachings in the family’s North Congregational Church of St. Johnsbury. Temperance was in the air. The Young Men’s Christian Association had been active in bringing about the Great Awakening and was still very active during Bob’s growing-up period. The great evangelists had inspired Vermont with their talk of salvation, the Bible, and God’s healing power. The Salvation Army was becoming well known for its outreach and resulting healing of derelicts and drunks. So too were the rescue mission events involving Jerry McAuley, Water Street Mission, and S.H. Hadley. The Young People’s Society of Christian Endeavor, in which Dr. Bob was active, had laid out a program of confession of Jesus Christ, conversions, Bible study meetings, prayer meetings, Quiet Hour observances, and reading and speaking on Christian literature. Their program, though not aimed at drunkards, was certainly focused on bringing young people back to their churches. In his early sobriety, Dr. Bob had turned back to church for himself and Sunday school for his children. And the program of the early Akron A.A. Christian Fellowship closely resembled the conversions which were so much a part of Bill’s life, and the principles and practices of Christian Endeavor.]

 

[Dr. Bob’s road back to sobriety could—like Bill Wilson’s—be said to have begun when he was at the bottom of the heap in 1931. I learned little about him at that time. But I researched an learned a lot about what happened in Akron in 1931. It revolved around the Firestone family, and Harvey’s protégé Jim Newton—a young man from Florida. When Jim arrived in Akron, he befriended Russell Firestone but found that Russell had a serious drinking problem. Jim tried to help Russell by Oxford Group techniques. But finally, the family decided to call in Rev. Sam Shoemaker of New York—an Oxford Group leader of that time. They (Harvey, Russell, Jim and Sam) boarded a train for a Bishop’s conference in Denver—with Russell well supplied with liquor. But on the trip back, Sam Shoemaker took Russell into a train compartment and led Russell to a new birth in Christ. By the time the train arrived back in Akron, Russell was healed, and his doctor felt it was a miracle. Russell and Jim then began traveling together and witnessing to others about the Oxford Group’s life-changing program. By 1933, the family was elated at Russell’s progress. They invited Dr. Frank Buchman and a retinue of some 30 Oxford Group activists to come to Akron, speak in the pulpits and public places, and inform the press. I have personally seen the Akron newspapers of that early 1933 period; and they are alive with talk of Russell and his “miracle,” of Jesus Christ, of the Bible, and of Christianity. And a large part of the town turned out to hear Russell, Jim, Buchman, and others give testimony.]

 

[The wheels of sobriety began to grind for Dr. Bob. His friend Henrietta Seiberling and his wife Anne attended the 1933 functions. They were excited. They persuaded Dr. Bob to join a small Oxford Group. And, though he continued to drink, Dr. Bob read all the Oxford Group literature he could get his hands on. He studied the Bible extensively once again. He read it from cover to cover three times. He prayed. And he enjoyed the people. But he concluded to Henrietta that he just didn’t want to quit drinking and was a “wanna wanna” guy. But Henrietta was undeterred. She convened a tiny group, including Bob. They all engaged in life-changing stories. Dr. Bob joined in and confessed that he was a “secret drinker.” Henrietta asked him if he wanted to pray for his deliverance. And Bob joined the group on his knees on the rug at the T. Henry Williams home, asking God for help. Help did not come at once. But a seemingly miraculous phone call reached Henrietta from an unknown stranger from New York. It was Bill Wilson saying that he was an Oxford Grouper, a rum hound from New York, and needed to talk with a drunk. Henrietta was sure this was an answer to the prayers and thought of Bill, “This is manna from heaven.” She arranged a visit at her home between Bob and Bill. It lasted six hours. Bob said he had heard it all before, but that Bill talked his language—the story of a drunk. Bob said he picked up on the idea of “service” which was something his religious endeavors had not gotten through to him.

 

And, after one last binge, Bob quit forever while Bill Wilson was living with the Smiths in their home.

 

 

 

The Bill Dotson (A.A. Number Three) Instant Cure by Turning to God

 

 

[We have run across very little concerning Bill Dotson, except as set forth in the biographical information above. However, we know for sure that: (1) Dotson was an attorney in Akron. (2) Dotson believed in God, went to church, taught Sunday school, and became a Deacon in the church. (3) His alcoholism had progressed to the point that he had been strapped to a hospital bed six times in the preceding months. (4) And when Dr. Bob inquired of a nurse whether there was a hospitalized drunk who needed help, she told them she had a dandy—Bill Dotson. (5) Bill and Bob visited Dotson, told him their stories, told him he needed to seek God’s help, and that—upon being healed—he must go out and help others in like situations. (6) Dotson did turn to God for help and was instantly cured. In fact, he subscribed to Bill Wilson’s statement on page 191 of the Big Book that “the Lord had cured” him and that he just wanted to keep talking about it and telling people. He called the statement the “golden text of A.A.” for him and for others. (7) And, when Bill and Bob had returned to the hospital, Dotson had been relieved of his drinking problem, He left the hospital with his wife—a free man. The date was July 4, 1935; and Bill Wilson proclaimed that as the founding date for A.A.’s first group—Akron Number One. Dotson remained active in A.A. and often led groups with a Bible in his lap, ready to help someone who needed help.]

 

The Co-Founders of Alcoholics Anonymous (Pamphlet P-53)

 

Dick B. and Ken B., The Dick B. Christian Recovery Guide, 3rd ed,, 2010.

 

Dick B. and Ken B. “Introductory Foundations for Christian Recovery” Class

 

 

 

[The Original Akron A.A. Christian Fellowship Program Founded in June, 1935, and the first group—Akron Number One—founded July 4, 1935 when Bill D. was cured.]

 

DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers

 

Dick B., The Akron Genesis of Alcoholics Anonymous

 

Dick B., Turning Point: The Spiritual History of Alcoholics Anonymous

 

Dick B., Henrietta B. Seiberling: Ohio’s Lady with a Cause

 

Alcoholics Anonymous Comes of Age, 66-72.

 

 

[The Principles and Practices of the Original Akron A.A. Pioneers]

 

Dick B. and Ken B., The Dick B. Christian Recovery Guide

 

Dick B., When Early AAs Were Cured and Why

 

DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers

 

Sue Smith Windows and Robert R. Smith, Children of the Healer, 1992

 

 

[The Role of the Bible in Earliest A.A.]

 

The Co-Founders of Alcoholics Anonymous

 

DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers

 

Dick B.,

 

The Good Book and The Big Book: A.A.’s Roots in the Bible

 

The Good Book-Big Book Guidebook

 

The James Club and the Original A.A. Program’s Absolute Essentials

 

Anne Smith’s Journal 1933-1939

 

Why Early A.A. Succeeded (A Bible Study Primer)

 

Cured: Proven Help for Alcoholics and Addicts

 

The First Nationwide Alcoholics Anonymous History Conference

 

 

[“Prayer and Meditation” in Earliest A.A.]

 

DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers

 

Dick B., Good Morning!: Quiet Time, Morning Watch, Meditation, and Early

 

 A.A.

 

Howard Rose, The Quiet Time

 

Donald Carruthers, How to Find Reality in Your Morning Devotions, Penn State

 College, n.d.

 

Nora Smith Holm, The Runner’s Bible

 

The Upper Room

 

Oswald Chambers, My Utmost for His Highest

 

E. Stamley Jones, Victorious Living

 

 

[The “Real Surrender” to Jesus Christ in Early A.A.]

Dick B.,

 

The Golden Text of A.A.

 

When Early AAs Were Cured and Why

 

That Amazing Grace

 

A New Way Out: New Path, Familiar Road Signs, Our Creator’s Guidance

 

Mitchell K., How It Worked

 

Dick B. and Ken B., The Dick B. Christian Recovery Guide

 

 

[The Akron Formula]

 

 

[Bible based, Christ-centered, bringing the Creator’s Power and Cures Back into Focus. And we believe the following are the ingredients common to most all successful Christian efforts to bring deliverance to alcoholics: 1. The choice of abstinence. 2. The choice of avoiding temptation. 3. The choice of entrusting one’s life to the care, direction, and strength of the Creator. 4. The choice of establishing a relationship with Him through Jesus Christ. 5. The choice of obeying His commandments and eliminating sinful conduct. 6. The choice of growing in knowledge and fellowship with Him, His son, and His children through Bible study, prayer, religious fellowship, worship, and witness. 7. The choice of passing along to others with love and service the message that will enable those others to help and be helped in the same manner.]

 

Dick B., A New Way Out, 63-64.

 

Dick B. and Ken B., Stick with the Winners

 

 

[The Daily Meetings, Family Emphasis, and Close Contacts Among Members—Resemblance to First Century Christianity]

 

[A.A. History – A.A. and First Century Christianity. The Multiple First Century Christianity-A.A. Quotes Among The Rockefeller People Who Investigated.  Five of the Rockefeller people involved with the Frank Amos report commented as follows on the First Century Christianity nature of the Akron A.A.:

 

Frank Amos: As stated, Rockefeller’s investigator Frank Amos had observed that the meetings of Akron people had, in many respects, taken on the form of the meetings described in the Gospels of the early Christians during the first century (Dr. Bob and the Good Oldtimers, pp. 135-36)

 

Albert Scott: In December, 1936. a meeting was held in John D. Rockefeller’s private board room. Bill W., Dr. Bob, Dr. Silkworth, Dr. Leonard Strong, and some alcoholics from New York and Akron met with Rockefeller’s associates Willard Richardson, A. Leroy Chapman, Frank Amos, and Albert Scott. The meeting was chaired by Albert Scott, chairman of the board of trustees of New York’s Riverside Church. Each alcoholic was enjoined to tell his own personal story, after which, the chairman Albert Scott exclaimed, “Why, this is first-century Christianity. What can we do to help?” (Alcoholics Anonymous Comes of Age, p. 148)

 

Nelson Rockefeller: In February of 1940, John D. Rockefeller, Jr. had arranged a dinner for Bill and the AAs. John D. had intended to attend, but was too ill to do so and sent his son Nelson Rockefeller to host the dinner. As Bill’s wife Lois Wilson records in her memoirs, “When Nelson finally got up to talk, there was a great deal of expectancy. He told how impressed his father [John D., Jr..] was with this unique movement, which resembled early Christianity.” (Lois Remembers, pp. 128-29)

 

Willard Richardson and John D. Rockefeller, Jr., himself: What they’d been hearing, he [Albert Scott] said, was like first century Christianity, where one person carried the word to the next. . . . Willard Richardson was in charge of all John D. Jr.’s philanthropies. . . Willard Richardson added his approval to the report and immediately passed it on to Mr. [John D.] Rockefeller. . . Rockefeller was impressed. He saw the parallel with early Christianity and along with this he spotted a combination of medicine and religion that appealed to all his charitable inclinations (Robert Thomsen, Bill W., pp. 274-75).

 

[The best comparative material can be found in Acts 2:41-47]

 

“Then they that gladly received his word were baptized: and the same day there were added [unto them] about three thousand souls.

 

And they continued stedfastly in the apostles' doctrine and fellowship, and in breaking of bread, and in prayers.

 

And fear came upon every soul: and many wonders and signs were done by the apostles.

 

And all that believed were together, and had all things common;

 

And sold their possessions and goods, and parted them to all [men], as every man had need.

 

And they, continuing daily with one accord in the temple, and breaking bread from house to house, did eat their meat with gladness and singleness of heart,

 

Praising God, and having favour with all the people. And the Lord added to the church daily such as should be saved.

 

Not surprisingly, Dr. Bob, co-founder of A.A. frequently called the early A.A. Akron program a "Christian Fellowship"

 

Dick B. and Ken B., The Dick B. Christian Recovery Guide, 3rd ed., 2010.

 

 

[The Counting of Noses in November, 1937 that proved God had shown the founders how to succeed]

 

 

[DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers also comments on the November 1937 meeting between Bill W. and Dr. Bob which led to the decision that a book about their cure for alcoholism would be needed.

 

In November of that year [i.e., 1937], Bill Wilson went on a business trip that enabled him to make a stopover in Akron. . . .

 

Bill's writings record the day he sat in the living room with Doc, counting recoveries. "A hard core of very grim, last-gasp cases had by then been sober a couple of years," he said. "All told, we figured that upwards of 40 alcoholics were staying bone dry

 

Up to then, prospects had come to the founders from other cities. Now, the question was whether every alcoholic had to come to Akron or New York to get sober. Was it possible to reach distant alcoholics? Was it possible for the Fellowship to grow "rapidly and soundly"?

 

This was when Bill began to think . . . of writing a book of experiences that would carry the message of recovery to other cities and other countries.

 

Let us now look at this vitally-significant, November 1937 meeting in more detail.

 

In an October 1945 article in the A.A. Grapevine titled "The Book Is Born," Bill referred to his meeting with Dr. Bob in Akron in November 1937 as follows:

 

By the fall of 1937 we could count what looked like forty recovered members. One of us had been sober three years, another two and a half, and a fair number had a year or more behind them. As all of us had been hopeless cases, this amount of time elapsed began to be significant. The realization that we had "found something" began to take hold of us. No longer were we a dubious experiment. Alcoholics could stay sober. Great numbers, perhaps! While some of us had always clung to this possibility, the dream now had real substance. If forty alcoholics could recover, why not four hundred, four thousand — even forty thousand. RHS: Co-founder of Alcoholics Anonymous: Our Beloved DR. BOB (NY: A.A. Grapevine, Inc., 1951), 8. The article from which this quote is taken also occurs in The Language of the Heart and is titled "Dr. Bob: A Tribute." This quote appears on page 359 of that article.       

 

In the quote above, Bill spoke of having counted "what looked like forty recovered members." He also speculated about possible, much larger numbers of alcoholics—"even forty thousand"—recovering.

 

Bill W. spoke more clearly and at greater length about his November 1937 meeting with Dr. Bob in Akron in his tribute to Dr. Bob in the special memorial issue of The A.A. Grapevine in January 1951 titled "RHS":

 

Meanwhile a small group had taken shape in New York. The Akron meeting at T. Henry's home began to have a few Cleveland visitors. At this juncture I spent a week visiting Dr. Bob. We commenced to count noses. Out of hundreds of alcoholics, how many had stuck? How many were sober? And for how long? In that fall of 1937 Bob and I counted forty cases who had significant dry time — maybe sixty years for the whole lot of them! Our eyes glistened. Enough time had elapsed on enough cases to spell out something quite new, perhaps something great indeed. . . . A beacon had been lighted. God had shown alcoholics how it might be passed from hand to hand. Never shall I forget that great and humbling hour of realization, shared with Dr. Bob.

 

But the new realization faced us with a great problem, a momentous decision. It had taken nearly three years to effect forty recoveries. The United States alone probably had a million alcoholics. How were we to get the story to them?

 

Here again, Bill declares that he and Dr. Bob "counted forty cases who had significant dry time" and refers to "forty recoveries." And note that Bill credited God with having shown them "how it might be passed from hand to hand." RHS: Co-founder of Alcoholics Anonymous: Our Beloved DR. BOB (NY: A.A. Grapevine, Inc., 1951), 8. The article from which this quote is taken also occurs in The Language of the Heart and is titled "Dr. Bob: A Tribute." This quote appears on page 359 of that article.

 

Bill wrote about his November 1937 meeting with Dr. Bob in Alcoholics Anonymous Comes of Age:

 

. . . [T]his trip [in the fall of 1937] gave me a much needed chance to visit Dr. Bob in Akron. It was on a November day in that year [of 1937] when Dr. Bob and I sat in his living room, counting the noses of our recoveries. There had been failures galore, but now we could see some startling successes too. A hard core of very grim, last-gasp cases had by then been sober a couple of years, an unheard-of development. There were twenty or more such people. All told we figured that upwards of forty alcoholics were staying bone dry.

 

. . . [A] benign chain reaction, one alcoholic carrying the good news to the next, had started outward from Dr. Bob and me. Conceivably it could one day circle the whole world. What a tremendous thing that realization was! At last we were sure. . . . We actually wept for joy, and Bob and Anne and I bowed our heads in silent prayer. Alcoholics Anonymous Comes of Age, 76. See also: Debra Jay, No More Letting Go: The Spirituality of Taking Action Against Alcoholism and Drug Addiction (New York, NY: Bantam Books, 2006), 287-88.

 

Here again, we see Bill commenting about the "upwards of forty alcoholics" who "were staying bone dry," while speaking almost in the same breath about how "it could one day circle the whole world."

 

The A.A. General Service Conference-approved book "Pass It On" also discusses this November 1937 meeting.

 

“Later in 1937, Bill . . . did visit Bob and Anne in Akron. It was on this visit that the two men conducted a "formal" review of their work of the past two years.

 

What they came to realize as a result of that review was astounding: Bill may have been stretching things when he declared that at least 20 cases had been sober a couple of years; but by counting everybody who seemed to have found sobriety in New York and Akron, they concluded that more than 40 alcoholics were staying dry as a result of the program! "Pass It On": The Story of Bill Wilson and How the A.A. Message Reached the World (New York, NY: Alcoholics Anonymous World Services, Inc., 1984), 177-78.

 

Bill W. also spoke briefly about this meeting with Dr. Bob—without mentioning numbers of recoveries—in his May 1955 article in the A.A. Grapevine titled "How AA's World Services Grew, Part 1," in The Language of the Heart, 142.

 

See also: Dick B., The Akron Genesis of Alcoholics Anonymous, 224-25.

 

Bill W.'s wife Lois remarked on the 40 in her memoirs:

 

The business depression returned in 1937, and toward the end of the year Quaw and Foley had to let Bill go. He went to Detroit and Cleveland looking for new job ideas and, of course, stopped off at Akron on the way

 

He and Bob assessed the current status of the movement. They were surprised to find that, although many of those they had worked with had fallen by the way, forty members enjoyed an average of two years' solid sobriety. This was flabbergasting, awe-inspiring. They really had hit on a program for helping alcoholics. Now they saw it could develop into something tremendous—if it was not diluted or garbled by word of mouth. Lois Remembers: Memoirs of the Co-founder of Al-Anon and Wife of the Co-founder of Alcoholics Anonymous (New York: Al-Anon Family Group Headquarters, Inc., 1987), 107.

 

Here are some key comments about this important tally of successes by other writers:

 

In November [of 1937] Bill had to make a trip to the Midwest in connection with the brokerage job he was trying to nail down. Although nothing came of his efforts concerning the job—another depression had hit the country in the fall of '37—the trip gave him an opportunity to visit Dr. Bob in Akron. Bill had been sober almost three years, Bob two and a half, and this, they figured, should be ample time for them to see where they were and even make some sort of informal progress report.

 

            There had been failures galore. Literally hundreds of drunks had been approached by their two groups and some had sobered up for a brief period but then slipped away. They were both conscious of their failures as they settled down in Bob's living room and began comparing notes. But as the afternoon wore on and they continued going over lists, counting noses, they found themselves facing a staggering fact. In all, in Ohio and in New York, they knew forty alcoholics who were sober and were staying sober, and of this number at least twenty had been completely dry for more than a year. Moreover, every single one of them had been diagnosed a hopeless case.

 

            As they sat, each with a paper in hand, checking and rechecking the score, a strange thing happened; they both fell silent. This was more than a game they were playing, more than a little casual bookkeeping to be used for a report. There were forty names representing forty men whose lives had been changed, who actually were alive tonight because of what had started in this very room. The chain reaction they had dreamed about—one alcoholic carrying the word to another—was a reality. It had moved onward, outward from them. Robert Thomsen, Bill W. (New York: Harper & Row, 1975), 266-67.

 

Although Bill Wilson and Dr. Bob Smith had communicated through dozens of letters, sitting down together again after almost two years turned out to be an astonishing experience. Whey they compared notes in person, they realized that they had actually found something that doctors and laymen had been searching for as long as anyone could remember: a way to help alcoholics get sober that actually worked. Between them they counted forty men who hadn't had a drink in more than a year Susan Cheever, My Name Is Bill: Bill Wilson: His Life and the Creation of Alcoholics Anonymous (New York: Washington Square Press, 2004), 147.

 

In November [of 1937], Bill . . . was able to spend some time in Akron. . . .

 

. . . He and the Smiths decided to take an inventory. Among those they had tried to help, the failures were endless, and many of those who seemed sincerely willing to try their approach were struggling. When they were done counting, though, they realized that between Akron and New York there were now forty alcoholics staying sober, and half of them had not had a drink for more than a year. Francis Hartigan, Bill W.: A Biography of Alcoholics Anonymous Cofounder Bill Wilson (NY: St. Martins Press, 2000), 101.]

 

 

[The Documented 75% Success Rate in the Akron A.A. Program]

 

Richard K., Early A.A.—Separating Fact from Fiction: How Revisionists Have

 

Led Our History Astray, 2003

 

Richard K. New Freedom: Reclaiming Alcoholics Anonymous, 2005

 

The one-page list in the hand of Dr. Bob—now in the Rockefeller Archives

 

Dick B. and Ken B., The Dick B. Christian Recovery Guide

 

 

[Bill Wilson’s Preparation for a New, Oxford Group-Oriented Program]

 

 

 

The Preparation of the First Edition of Alcoholics Anonymous

 

 

[This story begins with what Bill Wilson had learned from his extensive contacts with the Oxford Group, its meetings, its house parties, its teams, and Oxford Group leaders and activists such as Dr. Frank N.D. Buchman, Rev. Samuel M. Shoemaker, Irving Harris and his wife, Rowland Hazard, Shep Cornell, Cebra Graves, Garrett Stearly, Cleve Hicks, Victor Kitchen, Garth Lean, and others. He learned Oxford Group ideas from Shoemaker, Rowland Hazard, Ebby Thacher, and attendance at their meetings. Bill is mentioned personally in some of the Shoemaker personal journals we have seen. He was given a major post in bringing the president of the League of Nations to America. Bill left the Oxford Group in August of 1937, but he soon returned to become a personal friend and collaborator with Sam Shoemaker. Bill had gone to Akron to obtain permission to write a book, and he received it—by a bare majority of those voting. According to Bill, Shoemaker, and Irving Harris, Bill began working with Shoemaker on the contents of the book. They were closeted in Shoemaker’s book-lined study at Calvary House. Bill showed Shoemaker the first manuscript of the book. And he actually asked Shoemaker to write the Twelve Steps though Shoemaker declined. This charts the Big Book connections. And part of the preparations for the book were the so-called six word-of-mouth ideas Bill claimed were being used before the Big Book. Bill said there was no agreement on the contents of the six, and their contents certainly differed.

 

Here are the various ways Bill’s alleged six “steps” were phrased, for example, as to God:

 

1.      “We prayed to God.” See Dick B., The Akron Genesis of Alcoholics

 

Anonymous, 256-257; The Language of the Heart, 200; William White, Slaying the Dragon, 132.

 

 2.      “We prayed to whatever God we thought there was.” Dick B., The Akron

 

Genesis, 256; “Pass It On,” 197; Alcoholics Anonymous Comes of Age. 160; Jared Lobdell, This  Strange Illness, 242.                      .

 

 3.   We prayed to God as you understand him.” Jared Lobdell, This Strange Illness, 242; Dick B., Turning Point, 100.

 

4.      Bill Wilson also said his “six steps” came from the Oxford Group; and Lois

 

Wilson contended that the Oxford Group said: “Surrender your life to God.”

 

Lois Remembers, 92; Dick B., The Akron Genesis, 257. But, acting on the research and opinion of Oxford Group activist T. Willard Hunter, A.A.’s own publication “Pass It On” concluded the Oxford Group had no such six steps or any steps at all. “Pass It On,” 206, Footnote 2

 

5.      From some source or for some reason undocumented and seemingly false,

the purported author of a Big Book personal story titled, “8. HE SOLD HIMSELF SHORT,” (almost certainly Earl Treat of Chicago) was quoted with reference to six steps plus several other ideas attributed to Dr. Bob as saying: “Dependence and guidance from a Higher Power.” The story was added to the 1956 edition of Alcoholics Anonymous several years after Dr. Bob’s death. And it is my opinion, based on extensive research of and writing about Dr. Bob that the language on page 263 is language easily attributable to Bill Wilson but not typical of the way Dr. Bob spoke of God as “Heavenly Father” and “God” and not as some higher power. Examples of the questionable words are: 1. “Complete deflation.” 2. “Dependence and guidance from a Higher Power.” Dr. Bob had apparently asked a newcomer if he believed in “God”—not “a god”—God!

 

6.      In The Language of the Heart. in an article dated July, 1953, Bill makes the

 

following comments about his six word-of-mouth ideas: “. . . our growing groups at Akron, New York, and Cleveland evolved the so-called word-of-mouthl program of our pioneering time. As we commenced to form a Society separate from the Oxford Group, we began to state our principles something like this. . . . Though these principles were advocated according to the whim or liking of each of us, and though in Akron and Cleveland they still stuck by the O.G. absolutes of honesty, purity, unselfishness, and love, this was the gist of our message to incoming alcoholics up to 1939. . .,” 200. To see some of the inconsistencies in Bill’s statements and dates, consider these points: (a) Bill and Lois left the Oxford Group in August of 1937. (b) In 1938, Frank Amos summarized the Akron program in seven points—practically none of which paralleled Bill’s six. DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers, 131. (c) Clarence Snyder did not found the Cleveland groups until May of 1939, after the Big Book’s April publishing date. (d) In his two major speeches in 1948. Dr. Bob spoke about prayer and reading the Bible. He spoke favorably about the Four Absolutes. He said nothing that indicated he had departed from his adherence to the seven points summarized by Frank Amos in 1938

 

a)   For example, in referring to God, Bill spoke of praying to God, praying to God as you understood Him, and praying to whatever God you think there is. In one recital of the six points attributed without documentation to Dr Bob (a recital that I believe Bill himself wrote) the writer of the story uses and speaks typical Bill Wilson language—higher power, deflation in depth, and other ideas that I have not seen in usage in any other materials attributed to Bob and his Akron ideas.

 

b)   The first phase of Big Book preparation itself took the form of two chapters that Bill wrote in reverse order to those in the first two chapters of the Big Book. “Pass It On,’ 193. He then began sending the chapters, one by one, to Dr. Bob in Akron for approval. And the approval was forthcoming. Details are set forth in Dick B., The Akron Genesis of Alcoholics Anonymous, 233-239;

 

c)   At some point, the materials were assembled into what has been called the “multi-lith.” This was sent out to somewhere between 200 and 400 people for their comments.”Pass It On,” 200.Then they consolidated all comments on one multi-lith which can be seen in The Book That Started It All: The Original Working Manuscript of Alcoholics Anonymous (Center City, MN: Hazelden, 2010.

 

d)   Other important changes occurred along the way, at times and by persons I have been unable to identify though much effort has been expended in that direction. So I will simply list several of the changes made before and perhaps during the handling of  the Working Manuscript. These were: (1) A large amount of material containing Christian and biblical material had been discarded over the objections of John Henry Fitzhugh Mayo. It had apparently contained material “learned from the missions and the churches that had helped AAs.” The discard was verified in a conversation between Ruth Hock, the typist and secretary and Bill Pittman, director of historical information at Hazelden. (2) We know that at least 400 pages of manuscript material was cut by an editor, but no one who described the incident—even though hired by A.A. General Services to write “Pass It On”—could confirm anything but the truthfulness of the 400 page discard. But not what the pages contained or who discarded them. “Pass It On,” 204.  (3) Tom Uzzell of New York University edited the manuscript, and I have been unable to locate any information about him at NYU or concerning the changes he made. “Pass It On,” 204. (4) Substantial changes were made in the Working Manuscript itself. They were hand-written, and the authors have not yet been identified. However, it was then that Steps Two, Three, and Eleven were changed to eliminate the word “God.” And the changes were made in a compromise designed to appease atheists and agnostics.“Pass It On,” 199. Bill described the contending forces. He said: “Fitz wanted a powerfully religious book. Henry and Jimmy wanted none of it. They wanted a psychological book. . .” Alcoholics Anonymous Comes of Age, 17. Bill said, “All this time I had refused to budge on these steps. I would not change a word of the original draft, in which, you will remember, I had consistently used the word “God,” and in one place the expression “on our knees” was used. The changes from “God” to “Power greater than ourselves” and to “God as we understood Him. Such were the final concessions to those of little or no faith; this was the great contribution of our atheists and agnostics.” Alcoholics Anonymous Comes of Age, 166-167. “Fitz thought that the book ought to be Christian in the doctrinal sense of the word and that it should say so. He was in favor of using Biblical terms and expressions to make this clear. . . Paul K. was even more emphatic. Alcoholics Anonymous Comes of Age, 162. But Lois Wilson described those change those changes as follows: “The pros and cons were mostly about the tone of the book. Some wanted it slanted more toward the Christian religion—others, less. Many alcoholics were agnostics or atheists. Then there were those of the Jewish faith and, around the world, of other religions. Shouldn’t the book be written so that it would appeal to them? Finally it was agreed that the book should present a universal spiritual program, not a specific one, since all drunks were not Christian.” Lois Remembers, 113.

 

It is more than fair to say that the end result of the 1939 Big Book project was far far different from the program summarized as the Akron program by Frank Amos. Thus Bill finally made the following admissions in The Language of the Heart, pp. 297-298:

 

So, then, how did we first learn that alcoholism is such a fearful sickness as this? Who gave us this priceless information on which the effectiveness of our program so much depends? Well, it came from my own doctor, “the ;little doctor who loved drunks,” William D. Silkworth. More than twenty-five years ago at Towns Hospital, New York, he told Lois and me what the disease of alcoholism actually is

 

Of course, we have since found that these awful conditions of mind and body invariably bring on the third phase of our malady. This is the sickness of the spirit; a sickness for which there must be a spiritual remedy. We AAs recognize this in the first five words of Step Twelve of the recovery program . . .  Here we declare the necessity for that all important spiritual awakening. Who, then, first told us about the utter necessity for such an awakening, for an experience that not only expels the alcohol obsession, but which also makes effective and truly real the practice of spiritual principles “in all our affairs”? Well, this life-giving idea came to us AA through William James, the father of modern psychology. It came through his famous book Varieties of Religious Experience. . . William James also heavily emphasized the need for hitting bottom/ Thus did he reinforce AA’s Step One and so did he supply us with the spiritual essence of Step

Twelve.

 

Where did the early AAs find the material for the remaining ten Steps? Where did we learn about moral inventory, amends for harms done, turning wills and lives over to God? Where did we learn about meditation and prayer and all the rest of it? The spiritual substance of our remaining ten Steps came straight from Dr. Bob’s and my own earlier association with the Oxford Groups, as they were then led in America by that Episcopal rector, Dr. Samuel M. Shoemaker.

 

To learn the difference between this twelve step program which Bill said emanated from Sam Shoemaker and Dr. Bob’s statement that the basic ideas came from their study and effort in the Bible. And the summarized heart of that program is found in the Frank Amos report in DR BOB and the Good Oldtimers, 131:

 

            Following his visit to Akron in February 1938, Frank Amos, John D. Rockefeller, Jr.'s agent, summarized the original Akron A.A. “Program” in seven points. Here are those points, as quoted in Dr. Bob and the Good Oldtimers:

 

·         An alcoholic must realize that he is an alcoholic, incurable from a medical viewpoint, and that he must never drink anything with alcohol in it.

 

·         He must surrender himself absolutely to God, realizing that in himself there is no hope.

 

·         Not only must he want to stop drinking permanently, he must remove from his life other sins such as hatred, adultery, and others which frequently accompany alcoholism. Unless he will do this absolutely, Smith and his associates refuse to work with him.

 

·         He must have devotions every morning—a “quiet time” of prayer and some reading from the Bible and other religious literature. Unless this is faithfully followed, there is grave danger of backsliding

 

·         He must be willing to help other alcoholics get straightened out. This throws up a protective barrier and strengthens his own willpower and convictions.

 

·         It is important, but not vital, that he meet frequently with other reformed alcoholics and form both a social and a religious comradeship.

 

·         Important, but not vital, that he attend some religious service at least once weekly.

 

And we believe that if you master the original program, study the Big Book, look at our history, and then take the Twelve Steps, it is possible to get the best results from the Alcoholics Anonymous fellowship—just as Clarence Snyder did when he brought those elements to Cleveland and soon measured a 93% success rate there. See Dick B. and Ken B., Stick with the Winners.

 

 

 

Gloria Deo

  

   Trademarks and Disclaimer: ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS, A.A., and Big Book are registered trademarks of Alcoholics Anonymous World Services, Inc. Dick B.'s web site, Paradise Research Publications, Inc., and Good Book Publishing Company are neither endorsed nor approved by nor associated or affiliated with Alcoholics Anonymous World Services, Inc.

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