16 November 2024

November 16 in A.A. History

2427 Roxboro Rd (Sep 2009)
In 1939, The first meeting of the Borton Group—the longest continuously meeting group in Cleveland, Ohio and the first group ever to be unaffiliated with the Oxford Group—was held at 2427 Roxboro Rd. [right, Sep 2009] in Cleveland Heights, the home of a well-known non-alcoholic financier, Thomas E. Borton. A.A. had sobered up one of his alcoholic employees, and he was so grateful that he offered his home for meetings. Clarence S. started the Borton Group after being kicked out of the original Cleveland Group—which he also started—after only six months for secretly inviting Elrick B. Davis, a reporter for the Cleveland Plain Dealer, to meetings and for the explosion of local interest in A.A. that followed the publication of Davis’ articles about A.A in the Plain Dealer. Warren C. [A.A. #12] later recalled that the original Cleveland Group, which met at the home of Albert “Abby” G.,
   … was a mixture of Oxford Group plus those who came in new like myself. That was the first group where the Oxford Group people and the A.A.’s [sic] weren't mixed.
   … there were probably half a dozen Akron people who came up to Cleveland—Doc S—– [Dr. Bob], the S—– boys [Paul and Dick], Bill D. [A.A. #3], and so forth. Not every week, but once in a while. We sort of supported each other in the beginning.

Also in 1939, Lois W. wrote in her diary:

Drove to Cleveland [Ohio] for meeting. Tremendous gathering. Clarence [S.], Jack [perhaps Jack D. of New York, one of Bill’s pigeons], and Bill [W.] spoke. Then, Bill and I dashed to a second meeting. Met Mr. Lupton, Unitarian minister who is to give sermon on Nov. 26, and Elrick Davis, who wrote [the Cleveland] Plain Dealer articles.

Whatever Bill W.’s feelings about the Cleveland split, he played no favorites; he went to both meetings.


In 1949, Father Ed Dowling [left] came to the 24th St. Clubhouse in New York City to meet Bill W. for the first time.

 In 1950, Serenely remarking to his attendant, “I think this is it,” Dr. Robert H. S., 70, co-founder of Alcoholics Anonymous, died at noon in City Hospital in Akron, Ohio. He was cremated in Cleveland, Ohio and his remains were interred in Akron’s MountPeace Cemetery next to those of his wife Anne. Rev. Walter Tunks officiated. During his 15 years of sobriety, Dr. Bob treated more than 5,000 alcoholics, never accepting a fee for his professional services. Several hundred of them ended up in A.A. In his eulogy, Bill W. described Dr. Bob as “the prince of the Twelfth Steppers.”

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