In 1918, Bill W. [right, 1919 in France]
arrived in France with Battery C, 66th Artillery, Coast Artillery Corps
(C.A.C.). They would remain there until the end of the Great War (World War
I) just 14 days later, on November 11 at 11:11 a.m., but would not return
home until May 1919.
|
In 1919, the U.S. Senate voted 65–20 to override President
Wilson’s veto of the Volstead (National Prohibition) Act the day
before; the House had also voted to override on the same day.
Sponsored by the Chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee,
Representative Andrew Volstead
[left]
of Minnesota, the act implemented the 18th Amendment, which
prohibited “intoxicating liquors” without providing a clear
definition.
|
Some members of Congress believed this
referred only to hard liquor. However, Wayne Wheeler
[right], the head of the Anti-Saloon League, who actually written the legislation,
had crafted it to define intoxicating liquors as any beverage containing
more than 0.5% alcohol. The legislation made it illegal to “manufacture,
sell, barter, transport, import, export, deliver, furnish, or possess” such
beverages, though it did not prohibit their consumption.
In 1936, William “Bill” C. [left], 36, committed suicide at the home of Bill and Lois W., located at 182
Clinton St., Brooklyn, while the couple was in Maryland visiting Fitz M and
his wife.
Bill C. had been living with the W―—s for nearly a year and had been left in charge of the house. A brilliant lawyer from Canada, he worked for a prominent law firm by day and played bridge for money by night. The W―—s had rarely seen him and did not know him as well as they did most of their other house guests. His gambling appeared to be an even greater obsession than his drinking.
Bill W. returned home first. Upon opening the front door, he smelled gas. In the kitchen upstairs, he found Bill’s body on the floor, with a tube from the stove’s gas jet in his mouth. He had been dead for several days. Lois arrived the following day to find that Bill had already taken care of every detail [right: Daily News article from 29 Oct].
It took several months for the W―—s to realize that Bill had been selling their personal belongings and dress clothes, which were hung in a closet near the hallway bedroom he occupied. Among the missing items were Bill’s dress suit, his evening jacket, Lois’s black velvet evening wrap lined with white velvet, and several evening gowns. Suitcases were also missing. These were the remnants of the W―—s’ once affluent lifestyle. His remorse for these thefts may have contributed to Bill’s decision to take his own life.
Bill C. had been living with the W―—s for nearly a year and had been left in charge of the house. A brilliant lawyer from Canada, he worked for a prominent law firm by day and played bridge for money by night. The W―—s had rarely seen him and did not know him as well as they did most of their other house guests. His gambling appeared to be an even greater obsession than his drinking.
Bill W. returned home first. Upon opening the front door, he smelled gas. In the kitchen upstairs, he found Bill’s body on the floor, with a tube from the stove’s gas jet in his mouth. He had been dead for several days. Lois arrived the following day to find that Bill had already taken care of every detail [right: Daily News article from 29 Oct].
It took several months for the W―—s to realize that Bill had been selling their personal belongings and dress clothes, which were hung in a closet near the hallway bedroom he occupied. Among the missing items were Bill’s dress suit, his evening jacket, Lois’s black velvet evening wrap lined with white velvet, and several evening gowns. Suitcases were also missing. These were the remnants of the W―—s’ once affluent lifestyle. His remorse for these thefts may have contributed to Bill’s decision to take his own life.
In 1940, Doherty “Dohr” S. [left], a retired local businessman, Irish Catholic, and devoutly religious,
founded the first A.A. group in Indianapolis, Indiana. Desperate to stop
drinking, Dohr had reached out to the Cleveland group for help. In response,
Clarence S. had sent Irwin M. to make a 12th-step call on Dohr and guide him
in starting an A.A. group.
.jpg)
%20(cropped).png)
.png)
%20-%20Daily%20News%20(New%20York,%20NY),%20p%20325%20(anonymized).jpg)
.jpg)




.jpg)
.png)

.jpg)
%20(cropped).jpg)
.jpg)

