In 1940, Ruth Hock responded to a letter that John D. Rockefeller, Jr. had forwarded to the Alcoholic Foundation in New York City. On March 28, Dave W. from Seattle, Washington, had written to Rockefeller, presumably after reading news reports about the February 8 dinner he hosted on behalf of Alcoholics Anonymous. This marked the beginning of a lengthy correspondence between Ruth and Dave, who would later become one of the three founding members of Seattle's first A.A. group.
16 April 2025
April 16 in A.A. History
15 April 2025
April 15 in A.A. History
14 April 2025
April 14 in A.A. History
In 1959, in response to a letter to someone named Russ, Bill W. wrote a widely circulated defense of closing A.A. meetings with the Lord’s Prayer. Bill explained his reasoning:
[T]here will always be those who seem to be offended by the introduction of any prayer whatever into an ordinary A.A. gathering. Also, it is sometimes complained that the Lord's Prayer is a Christian document. Nevertheless this Prayer is of such widespread use and recognition that the arguments of its Christian origin seems to be a little farfetched. It is also true that most A.A.s believe in some kind of God and that communication and strength is obtainable through His grace. Since this is the general consensus it seems only right that at least the Serenity Prayer and the Lord's Prayer be used in connection with our meetings. It does not seem necessary to defer to the feelings of our agnostic and atheist newcomers to the extent of completely hiding our light under a bushel.
13 April 2025
April 13 in A.A. History
April 12 in A.A. History
The first paper [right: 1st page], “The Problem of Alcoholism,” by Dr. Baldwin L. Keyes, began with the statement:
The enormity of the problem presented by alcoholism staggers the imagination.… It has been shown that the cost of care for alcoholism in one year in the United States far exceeds $12,000,000 [~$140 million in 2025]… and exceeds two thirds of the cost of care of all bodily ills.
“How does it [A.A.] work?” I do not know, nor have I heard a satisfactory explanation.Dr. Davis also briefly described six of the many mechanisms that make up “a composite of many fundamental principles of medicine, psychiatry, and religion,” as follows.
(1) Acceptance of alcoholism as a disease.…Finally, he summarized the personal experiences of three members of the original A.A. group in Philadelphia:
(2) Friendship.…
(3) Personal contact.…
(4) Group therapy in open meetings.…
(5) Individual psychotherapy in closed meetings.…
(6) Stimulation of the ego.…
These members gave convincing and graphic accounts of their experiences in recovery achieved in connection with their associations in Alcoholics Anonymous. In its simplest form, the therapeutic situation includes (a) admission of alcoholism; (b) personality analysis and catharsis; (c) adjustment of personal relations; (d) dependence on some higher power, and (e) working with other alcoholic patients.[Left:Archives of Neurology and Psychiatry Society Transactions, Vol. 57, where these papers can be found.]
11 April 2025
April 11 in A.A. History
In 1939, after Bill W. set aside one copy of the first printing of Alcoholics Anonymous as a Christmas gift for Lois and sent two copies to the Library of Congress as part of the copyright registration process, he and Hank P. sent the next 29 copies to the authors of the stories in the back of the book. The following 40 copies were sent to non-alcoholic subscribers of Works Publishing’s stock. This left only 40 copies availble for sale, which, at the list price of $3.50 [~$80 in 2025], would have raised only $140 [~$3,200 in 2025] for the Alcoholic Foundation.
In 1939, Margaret “Marty” M. [left: at Blythewood Sanitarium, 4 Jul 1938] attended her first A.A. meeting at the home of Bill and Lois W., located at 182 Clinton Street in Brooklyn.
10 April 2025
April 10 in A.A. History
In 1939, Alcoholics Anonymous [right] was published in a run of 4,650 copies (some say 4,730). The publisher, Cornwall Press, was instructed to use the thickest paper available. This large, bulky volume became known as the “Big Book,” a name that has endured. Bill W. later wrote that the intention behind the thick, substantial paper was to assure alcoholics that they were getting their money’s worth. Given Works Publishing's financial situation, Cornwall Press decided to minimize its risk by binding only 1,000 copies, leaving the rest loose. Works Publishing was billed $1,783.15 [~$40,750 in 2025], of which nearly half—$884.26—had already been paid. Bill and Hank P. drove to the Cornwall Press bookbinder’s office in New York City to pick up 112 copies, returning the next day for three more. Bill set aside the first copy from the first box to give to Lois for Christmas.
Apparently, little thought was given to copyright before the book was published. Once copies became available, Ruth Hock sent a package to Fitz M.—who, along with Florence R., was in Washington, D.C., trying to establish the first local A.A. group—containing two copies of the first printing of the first edition and a letter with instructions [left: application for copyright registration]:
We are forwarding to you today, two copies of “Alcoholics Anonymous” and a check for $2.00 [~$46 in 2025], and wonder if you would do something which would be very helpful at this end. It is important that “Alcoholics Anonymous” be registered at the Copywright [sic] Office in Washington, D.C. in the name of Works Publishing Company at the earliest possible moment…
The two books for copywright [sic] purposes are coming forward to you marked special handling, special delivery, so will you rush them through for us?
A book for you and also one for Florence are also in the mail, but regular delivery.
Will you let us know the minute you have “Alcoholics Anonymous” registered?
In 1958, the International Conference of Young People in A.A. (ICYPAA) issued a press release [right] for its inaugural conference, scheduled to take place at the Niagara Hotel in Niagara Falls, NY, on 26–27 Apr 1958.
In 1979, Barry L. signed a notarized letter [left] donating his original spiral-bound multilith copy of Alcoholics Anonymous, which had been given to him by Lois W.—he had been a close companion of hers. Barry stated that he would keep the copy until his death, at which point it would be transferred to A.A. World Services, Inc.
April 9 in A.A. History
In 2021, Kansas City Group #1 of Kansas City, Missouri, celebrated its 80th anniversary with an online-only event [right: flyer].
08 April 2025
April 8 in A.A. History
In 1932
, Bill W. formed a stock-buying syndicate with two Wall Street figures—Arthur Wheeler and Frank Winans. Gardner Swentzel, married to his wife’s sister, Kitty, had introduced Bill to these two men. All three partners believed it to be a good time to buy stocks. Bill was to be manager of the syndicate. Each would put up capital for the venture.
Aware of Bill’s growing drinking problem, Winans insisted on a clause voiding the contract and forfeiting Bill’s stake should he drink. As it happened, Bill had recently been fired after a drunken brawl with a cab driver. He had given his wife Lois his $2,000 severance check, but now he took it back to invest with the syndicate. Bill managed to stay sober for only five weeks, and therefore lost his entire $2,000 investment.
Dr. [Harry Emerson] Fosdick; Rev. M. J. Lavelle, at St. Patrick’s Cathedral; Mrs. [E. L.] Ballard [whom Richardson had solicited for funds the previous October]; Mrs. Charles L. Burke, of 375 Riverside Drive [who had given the Foundation an “anonymous” contribution of $50 [~$1,100 in 2025] the previous summer or fall; Mr. [Albert] Scott [another Rockefeller associate and trustee].
All three of these men—Amos, Richardson, and Chipman—were associates of Mr. Rockefeller, as well as Class A (non-alcoholic) trustees of the Alcoholic Foundation.
In 1947, after a challenging year of discussions regarding policy and structure, Bill W. submitted a 43-page report titled “Our AA General Service Center—The Alcoholic Foundation of Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow,” to the Trustees of the Alcoholic Foundation. The report outlined the Foundation’s history and recommended establishing an experimental General Service Conference, as well as renaming the Foundation the “General Service Board.” It reflected Bill’s concerns expressed in a letter to the Trustees dated 10 July 1946, as he sought to lay the groundwork for A.A.’s “coming of age.”
Initially, the Trustees reacted defensively, ultimately becoming outright negative, as they perceived no need for change. Their passive resistance evolved into solid opposition.
In 1950, Illustrated magazine [left: cover] (London, UK) published Willi Frischauer’s article, “Alcoholics Anonymous,” which included 8 photographs spread over 3½ pages [below: the 3½ pages].
07 April 2025
April 7 in A.A. History
On the same day, Hank wrote to both men, informing them to expect the book on Monday and asking for payment as soon as possible. Knowing that Richardson was ill, Amos contacted A. LeRoy Chipman [left], another non-alcoholic trustee, and requested that he accept delivery on behalf of the Alcoholic Foundation.
In 1944, David “Dave” B. [right] got sober in A.A. He became a founder of A.A. in the province of Quebec and served as a Class B (alcoholic) Trustee from 1962–64. His story, “Gratitude In Action,” appeared in the 4th edition of the Big Book, Alcoholics Anonymous.
06 April 2025
April 6 in A.A. History
In 1960, A funeral Mass was held for Father Edward P. “Ed” Downing, S.J. [right]. In 2016, Magnificat published an article about him that said, in part,
He was an old-school priest, made of the kind of fine cloth that prefers to disguise itself as sacking. His funeral was packed. From society matrons in mink coats to Skid Row drunks, people came from around the country to pay homage.
“I really haven’t done anything,” Father Dowling once said. “It’s really simple. I just happened to be around.”
He was buried in St. Stanislaus Cemetery in Florissant, Missouri, near St. Louis.
05 April 2025
April 5 in A.A. History
In 1960, an editorial in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, published on the eve of Father Ed Dowling’s funeral, stated:
The Rev. Edward Dowling, S.J., was a kindly man who never allowed kindliness to keep him from speaking his mind. He made friends wherever he went, especially among newspaper people. He left the city room for the Jesuit Seminary, but he was like the old firehorse. Crippling arthritis restricted his activities but a cane always got him to a Newspaper Guild meeting, to a party for a Pulitzer Prize winner, or any journalistic bull session which promised to bring out the “inside story” of what made the wheels turn. Eddie Dowling did not vaunt his kindliness; he used it quietly to help those who needed help. They will remember him as long as those who only learned from him that the world is never too gloomy for cheerfulness—even though it always is a little better with a dollop of bourbon and a touch of branch water.
04 April 2025
April 4 in A.A. History
In 1894, Margaret Mary Pennington was born in Baltimore, Maryland. While abroad, she would meet Count Victor Von Lüttichau of Germany and marry him in Switzerland. The Count would die around 1946, and in 1948, she would marry Dr. William D. Marbury, who had a practice in Washington, D.C.
As Margarita Von Lüttichau, she would play a crucial role as an intermediary between Carl Jung [near right] and Bill W. [far right], the co-founder of Alcoholics Anonymous. She would become a student of Jung and a protégé of Bill’s, acting as a bridge between their ideas and writings. After World War II, she would frequently travel between the U.S. and Switzerland, introducing the writings and concepts of each to the other.
03 April 2025
April 3 in A.A. History
In 1941, Florida’s first A.A. group was formally organized in Miami.
The first A.A. contact from Florida was Horace S., a loner in Daytona Beach, who reached out to the Alcoholic Foundation in November 1939. By July 1942, he had moved to Connecticut, leaving no A.A. members behind.
What I really meant was this: I was catapulted into a spiritual experience, which gave me the capability of feeling the presence of God, His love, and His omnipotence. And, most of all, His personal availability to me. Of course this is the ABC of the conversion experience—something as old as man himself. So maybe an awareness of God and some sense of relation to him constitutes a fourth dimension. At least this was true for me, one who had no belief or such sensibility whatever.
02 April 2025
April 2 in A.A. History
01 April 2025
April 1 in A.A. History
In 1926, after three months of courtship, Clarence S. [near right, 1942] and Dorothy Wright [far right] got married.
In 1940, Lawrence “Larry” J. [left] of Houston, Texas wrote the A.A. prayer that was used to begin A.A. meetings in Texas for many years:
Our Father, we come to you as a friend.Amen.
You have said that, where two or three are gathered together in your name, there you will be in the midst. We believe you are here with us now.
We believe this is something you would have us do, and that it has your blessing.
We believe that you want us to be real partners with you in this business of living, accepting our full responsibility, and certain that the reward will be freedom, and growth, and happiness.
For this we are grateful.
We ask you, at all times, to guide us.
Help us daily to come closer to you, and grant us new ways of living our gratitude.
In 1945, [Easter Sunday] Knickerbocker Hospital [left, c. 1940] opened a small ward dedicated to the treatment of alcoholism, making it the first general hospital in New York City to have such a facility. This is significant because many general hospitals at that time would not admit alcoholics; instead, their doctors had to admit them under false diagnoses.
In 1950, The Saturday Evening Post published Jack Alexander’s “The Drunkard’s Best Friend” [right, p. 1], a follow-up to his article about A.A., “Alcoholics Anonymous: Freed Slaves of Drink, Now They Free Others,” which was published on 1 March 1941.
In 1966, Sister Ignatia [far left], born Mary Ignatia Gavin, died at the age of 77 at the motherhouse of the Sisters of Charity in Richfield, Ohio. While working with Dr. Bob S. [near left], she treated thousands of early A.A. members at St. Thomas Hospital in Akron, Ohio. She was buried in the motherhouse cemetery.
In 1970, A.A.’s General Service Office (G.S.O.) moved from 305 E. 45th St. to 468 Park Ave. S. (formerly 4th Ave.). Box 4-5-9 reported:
A building between 31st and 32nd Streets, on the west side of Park Ave. South (formerly 4th Ave.), is the new home for G.S.O. and the Grapevine…In 1984, Ron R. founded The Twelve Coconuts Group at Kapiolani Park [right: the Twelve Coconuts], Waikiki, Hawaii. He later recalled,
To find us, look for 468 Park Ave. South here in New York City.…“Why the move? The two main reasons are: (1) to save money, and (2) to get more space.”
For about three weeks I went all over town to different meetings with bookmarks that had the 11th Step Prayer on them, I had gotten them from a Catholic Book Store… [I wrote them] up with “New Meeting in Kapiolani Park, Mon. Wed. and Fridays at seven in the morning. April 1st. I did a lot of writing. The first meeting had 32 people.
31 March 2025
March 31 in A.A. History
In 1939, Bill W. drove from Cornwall, New York, to New York City, presumably in Hank P.’s car, to secure enough money to pay the hotel bill for the two nights he, Hank, Ruth Hock, and Dorothy Wright S. had stayed. The four of them had been correcting printers’ proofs of the book Alcoholics Anonymous [left: 1st edition, 2nd printing] based on the hand-edited multilith manuscript, a task that was neither quick nor easy. Together, they had only half the cash needed to cover their stay.
In New York City, Bill approached Charlie (Charles B.) Towns [right], the owner of Towns Hospital, where he and Hank had gotten sober, and explained the situation. Charlie lent Bill the money required to pay the bill, plus an additional $100 [~$2,300 in 2025].
Bill later wrote, “Mr. Towns was not too favorably impressed when he heard where we stood, but he came through with the hotel bill and about a hundred dollars to spare.… We all returned to New York in high spirits.”
In 1933, the Chicago Daily Tribune reported, “State to Open 1st Hospital to Treat Alcoholic Patients” [right: article].
In 1947, England’s first known A.A. meeting took place at 8 p.m. in Room 202 of London’s upscale Dorchester Hotel [left, 1931], following an invitation from New York City A.A. member Grace O. [below right]. The Alcoholic Foundation had asked her to reach out to several individuals in Britain seeking information about A.A. The previous Saturday, the 29th, she had met an alcoholic known as “Canadian Bob” at a restaurant on Dean Street in London. The Dorchester meeting was attended by Grace, Robert “Canadian Bob” B., Chris L. B.—who was likely the first person in England to use the A.A. program to achieve sobriety—Sgt. Vernon W. (an American soldier), and Norman Rees-Watkins (from South Croydon and still drinking). Some sources also mention additional attendees: Pat F. (from London), Ward Williams (an American), Tony F. (an Irish airman), “Flash” W. (an American), and Pat G. (a female member from California whom Grace had met on the voyage from New York to London).
As Bob later recalled the Dorchester meeting:
It was Grace O. who really triggered off the inception of AA in England. She had written to me before she and her husband, Fulton, embarked at New York on one of the Queens. During lunch in London, her husband and I mapped out on a Saturday plans for a meeting the following Monday. Eight of us met in her hotel room, the last night of March 1947 and the five Londoners chose me as Secretary.Subsequent meetings were held at Canadian Bob’s home [left, c. 1946] on Mortlake Road in Kew and in various cafés.
In 1954, Bill W. wrote in a letter to Jack Alexander, “The whole A.A. Tradition is, in a sense, the result of my gradual adjustment to reality.”
30 March 2025
March 30 in A.A. History
He was an active member of Alcoholics Anonymous for 57 years. In 1948, at the urging of Bill W., Searcy began attending the Yale School of Alcohol Studies and later graduated. In 1950, he founded the Texas Clinic-Hospital for Alcoholism in Dallas. It was at this facility that Ebby T. sobered up in 1953; he remained sober for most of the next 13 years.
His motto was, “Trust God, clean house, help others,” to which he would add, “... and it doesn't have to be done in that order!”

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