In 1939, Bill and Lois W. were forced to leave their home at 182 Clinton St.
[right, c. 1940] in Brooklyn, where they had lived since Lois’s father remarried and moved out
in May 1933, shortly after Lois’s mother’s death. The bank held a mortgage but,
preferring to have the property occupied rather than empty, allowed the W.s to
stay on a month-to-month basis for less than the monthly mortgage—specifically,
a “nominal” payment of $20 [~$460 in 2025]. With the Great Depression loosening
its grip, foreclosure restrictions had eased, allowing the bank to foreclose and
sell the building. This was a difficult blow for Lois, as it was her childhood
home.
They had no place to keep their belongings, so most went into storage. As Bill later remarked, “There wasn’t enough money to even get our goods into storage. We had to go on the cuff [on credit] with the drayman [wagon driver].”
With nowhere to live, Bill and Lois moved in with Hank and Kathleen P. in Montclair, New Jersey. Lois’s terse diary entry reads, “Left 182 for good. Went to P—–s [sic].” This would be just the first of over 50 temporary homes they would inhabit over the next two years.
In her memoir, Lois Remembers, Lois noted that “soon after we left Clinton Street, Hank and Kathleen started holding Sunday meetings at their new home”—a sign that the A.A. movement was still alive and growing, even though Bill remarked of their ouster, “So climaxed four years of Alcoholics Anonymous.”
A few days later, Bill and Lois moved again, this time to a remote bungalow in rural Green Pond, New Jersey. Lois's diary entries—many included in her memoir—suggest that this stay was one of her happiest times during Bill's first five years of sobriety.
They had no place to keep their belongings, so most went into storage. As Bill later remarked, “There wasn’t enough money to even get our goods into storage. We had to go on the cuff [on credit] with the drayman [wagon driver].”
With nowhere to live, Bill and Lois moved in with Hank and Kathleen P. in Montclair, New Jersey. Lois’s terse diary entry reads, “Left 182 for good. Went to P—–s [sic].” This would be just the first of over 50 temporary homes they would inhabit over the next two years.
In her memoir, Lois Remembers, Lois noted that “soon after we left Clinton Street, Hank and Kathleen started holding Sunday meetings at their new home”—a sign that the A.A. movement was still alive and growing, even though Bill remarked of their ouster, “So climaxed four years of Alcoholics Anonymous.”
A few days later, Bill and Lois moved again, this time to a remote bungalow in rural Green Pond, New Jersey. Lois's diary entries—many included in her memoir—suggest that this stay was one of her happiest times during Bill's first five years of sobriety.
In 1958, the first International Convention of Young People in Alcoholics Anonymous
(ICYPAA) opened at the Hotel Niagara
[left] in Niagara Falls, New York. The A.A. Exchange Bulletin (precursor to Box
4-5-9) explained that the purpose of ICYPAA was…
to provide delegates with a thorough rundown of the application of our A.A. program to the individual difficulties encountered by young people in dealing not only with alcoholism but also with the other problems peculiar to their generation.
In 1959, This Week published “Don’t Tell Me I’m Not an Alcoholic”
[right: first 2 pages] by John Boit Morse, as told to Arthur Gordon.
In 1986, Bob P. [left] delivered a farewell address at the closing brunch of the 36th General Service Conference (GSC) at the Hotel Roosevelt in New York City. The occasion was significant, as he was nearing retirement and this would be his final GSC. The Final Report described it as “a powerful and inspiring closing talk titled ‘Our greatest danger: rigidity.’” He said, in part,
If you were to ask me what is the greatest danger facing A.A. today, I would have to answer: the growing rigidity… And in this trend toward rigidity, we are drifting farther and farther away from our co-founders. Bill, in particular, must be spinning in his grave, for he was perhaps the most permissive person I ever met. One of his favorite sayings was, “Every group has the right to be wrong.” He was maddeningly tolerant of his critics…
April 26–May 2
In 1981, at the 31st General Service Conference, held at the Roosevelt Hotel in New York City, the following were among the advisory actions:
- All future events such as the International Convention not be planned to operate on a deficit basis, and it was also recommended that all future events of this type be self-supporting.
- The suggestion to publish a pamphlet for the homosexual alcoholic be tabled [to] 1982.
- A footnote be added to Tradition Eight in the book “Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions,” page 169, to update the job description of present-day G.S.O. staff members. The suggested footnote to read: [Their work has no counterpart in commercial organizations.]
- [That] “The AA. Service Manual” and “Twelve Concepts for World Service” be combined.
In 1987, at the 37th General Service Conference, held at the Roosevelt Hotel in New York City, there were two significant sets of presentations by Area Delegates addressing internal concerns that had arisen out of the 36th GSC, with discussion following. The first included two talks by Area delegates:
-
“The Right of Decision Makes Effective Leadership Possible (Concept III),” which said, in part:
At last year’s Conference there seemed to be some doubt or feeling of unrest about… the trustee's report on the… Conference Committee. The scope of the Conference… Committee is to review and approve the agenda… make recommendations to the Conference for approval, disapproval, or amendment…
-
“The Principle of Mutual Trust (Tradition Two),” which said, in part:
[Let us] reflect upon why we… have presentations at Conference after Conference questioning the trust or lack of trust between the different levels of A.A. service… It may… suggest that we are all to quick to become guarded or to doubt. Both… contribute to mistrust. Perhaps it is time for us… to be open with one another…
The second set presentations, “The Use of Surveys in Making Conference Decisions,” included three talks, two by Area delegates and the third by a Class B trustee:
- "PRO—Don't Surveys Help Take the Pulse of the FeIlowship?,"
- "CON—Surveys Don't Help in Making Conference Decisions," and
- "How Can Survey's be Utilized?"
These grew out of criticism that the
Conference may be avoiding its responsibility by recommending surveys of the
membership to determine whether or not we should, for example, publish a
soft-cover format of the Big Book or a daily reflections book.
April 26–May 3
In 2009, at the 59th General Service Conference, held at the Crowne Plaza Times Square in New York City, the following were among the advisory actions: that…-
>
- the revised draft pamphlet, “For the Native North American,” be pproved;
- the trustees' Literature Committee undertake a through review of the pamphlet, “Questions and Answers on Sponsorship,” and eliminate or revise outmoded ethnic. cultural and vocational references;
- the title of the pamphlet, “44 Questions,” be changed to “Frequently Asked Questions About A.A.;”
- the General Service Board develop a procedure for the submission of Concept V minority appeals to the General Service Conference;
- all changes to The A.A. Service Manual combined with Twelve Concepts for World Service be listed in the edition in which the changes appear for the first time, and organized by source of change (General Service Board, Conference Advisory Action, Conference Committee on Report & Charter,Publications Department), [and] Conference Advisory Actions will be noted by vertical margin change bars in the edition in which the change appears for the first time; and
- we develop Conference-approved literature that focuses on spirituality and includes stories from atheists and agnostics who are successfully sober in Alcoholics Anonymous.
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