In 1935, Bill D.
[right, with his wife, Henrietta], a prominent attorney and Akron city councilman, was admitted to Akron City
Hospital in Ohio for his final detox and the first day of his sobriety. In his
story, “Alcoholics Anonymous Number Three,” found in the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th
editions of Alcoholics Anonymous, he wrote,
On June 26, 1935, I came to in the hospital, and to say I was discouraged is to put it mildly. Each of the seven times I had left this hospital in the previous six months, I had come fully determined in my own mind that I would not get drunk again—for at least six to eight months. It hadn’t worked out that way, and I didn’t know what the matter was and did not know what to doTwo days later, Bill W. and Dr. Bob S. came to see him. Six days after that, he left the hospital, never to drink again. That day, July 4, marked the founding of A.A. Group Number One. Within a week, he was back in court, arguing a case.
Today in A.A. History—June 26–29
In 1955, the 5th General Service Conference met prior to the 2nd International
Conference at the Jefferson Hotel
[left, c. 1940s] in St. Louis, Missouri. Advisory Actions included:
- The… plan for selecting Class B Trustees from outlying areas is submitted for consideration, subject to approval of the General Service Conference [note: this is the first move to establish Regions—the initial geographical groupings were called “Area A” thru “Area E”].
- The Delegates voted overwhelmingly to set the retail price of the new edition [of Alcoholics Anonymous] at $4.50 [~$54 in 2025], the price to A.A. groups at $4.00 [~$48 in 2025] and to earmark fifty cents [of each sale] for the Reserve Fund.
- … adopting the proposed permanent “Charter of the General Service Conference of Alcoholics Anonymous—North American Section,” subject to approval of the 20th Anniversary Convention of A.A.
A Public Relations Policy and Practice report noted, among other things, the
following activities:
- Headquarters cooperation with the North American Newspaper Alliance syndicate, with Fawcett Publications and with the New York Daily News on stories proposed. In all cases, emphasis is on the fact that A.A. does not “promote” publicity, nor does it endorse specific articles.
- Headquarters cooperation in John Daly’s network television presentation on A.A. on his “Open Hearing” program. Substantial assistance was rendered by Grapevine personnel.
- Continued correspondence and consultation with representatives of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer studios over the projected filming of the Lillian Roth book, “I'll Cry Tomorrow,” in which it is proposed to portray an A.A. member who deliberately breaks anonymity.
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