27 December 2024

December 27 in A.A. History
Headshot image of Rev. Dr. Samuel Moor Shoemaker
Shoemaker

In 1893, Samuel Moor Shoemaker [right] was born in a second-floor front room of a rented house on Read Street in Baltimore, Maryland, to Ellen Ward “Nellie” Whitridge (later president of the Women’s Auxiliary of the Episcopal Diocese of Mary­land) and Samuel Moor Shoemaker, Jr. (later chairman of the Board of Regents of the University of Mary­land), who had met at Emmanuel Church in Baltimore, where Sam’s uncle was rector.
   When Sam was two years old the family would move to their country home, Burnside, about ten miles [~16 km] north of Baltimore. To Sam, throughout his life, this was home. Between 1860–1863, his grandfather had bought the 13 tracts of land, adding up to 467 acres [nearly 2 km2], that was Burnside, a beautiful piece of land nestled between two lines of gently rolling hills in the Green Spring Valley.
   The Rev. Dr. Samuel Shoemaker would become head of the Oxford Group in the United States, as well as rector of Calvary Church in New York City. Shoemaker provided a safe haven for alcoholics. He also ran Calvary Mission, which both "Ebby" T. and Bill W. visited in 1934, and Calvary House, where early A.A. members came for Oxford Group meetings. He formed a close, long-lasting friendship with Bill W., offering guidance and support during A.A.'s formative years. Bill would credit Shoemaker with providing "most of the Twelve Steps of Alcoholics Anonymous, steps that express the heart of AA's way of life" and name him as a co-founder (one of many).

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