In 1840, the Washingtonian Temperance Society held its first public meeting,
setting off the rapid growth of the movement. They received widespread
and enthusiastic support from thousands of existing temperance societies, as
the Washingtonians successfully mobilized public attention for temperance
through their “experience sharing” of alcoholic debauchery, followed by
inspiring accounts of personal reformation [left: Washingtonian pledge card].
One of the movement’s leaders remarked,
One of the movement’s leaders remarked,
There is a prevalent impression, that none but reformed drunkards are admitted as members of the Washingtonian Society. This is a mistake. Any man may become a member by signing the pledge, and continue so by adhering to it.
In 1912, Bill W. hurried into the chapel at Burr and Burton Academy and took his
seat with the other students, believing that his first love, Bertha Bamford,
was in New York City with her family. Nothing could have prepared him for
what was to come. His later recollections included the following:
The principal of the school came in and announced with a very grave face that Bertha, the minister’s daughter and my beloved, had died suddenly and unexpectedly the night before. It was simply a cataclysm of such anguish as I’ve since had but two or three times. It eventuated in what was called an old-fashioned nervous breakdown, which meant, I now realize, a tremendous depression [right: Bertha’s obituary, The Bennington (Vermont) Evening Banner, 19 Nov 1912, p. 1].…
Interest in everything except the fiddle collapsed. No athletics, no schoolwork done, no attention to anyone. I was utterly, deeply, and compulsively miserable, convinced that my whole life had utterly collapsed.…
The healthy kid would have felt it badly, but he would never have sunk so deep or stayed submerged for so long.…
The upshot was that I failed German and, for that reason, could not graduate. Here I was, president of my senior class… and they wouldn’t give me a diploma! My mother arrived, extremely angry, from Boston. A stormy scene took place in the principal’s office. Still, I didn’t get that diploma.…
I could not be anybody at all. I could not win, because the adversary was death. So my life, I thought, had ended then and there.
In 1935, Ebby T. came to live with Bill and Lois W. at 182 Clinton Street in Brooklyn [left, c. 1940].
In 1939, Cleveland, Ohio’s first Spanish-speaking meeting, Grupo Serenidad (Serenity Group), was founded—just three days after the Borton Group, the city's longest-running A.A. group and the first anywhere without a connection to the Oxford Group. There are no known records of Grupo Serenidad's subsequent activities or its demise.
In 1941, The Daily Oklahoman (Oklahoma City, Oklahoma) published “New Way
Out for Hopeless Drinkers” [right] by Edith Johnson. It began,
Because they known just how it feels to be befogged and sick and thoroughly miserable through days or weeks or months of intoxication Alcoholics Anonymous are having success in helping others to discard the drink habit that is no less than startling.

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