In 1849, Ella A. Brock [right], Bill W.’s maternal grandmother, was born to John and Nancy Bowen Brock,
in East Dorset, Vermont. She and her husband, Gardner F. Griffith, would
raise Bill from the age of about 10.
In 1945,
Rowland Hazard III
[left], 64, died of a coronary occlusion (heart blockage) while working in his
office at Bristol Manufacturing
[right: obituary, The New York Times, 22 Dec 1945]. Rowland had carried the spiritual message of the Oxford Group to Ebby T.,
who then passed it on to Bill W. His position as a top executive of a major
corporation at the time of his death suggests that Rowland had managed to
stop drinking again, despite several known relapses. However, some
historians question whether he was truly sober at the time of his death.
He had remained active in the Oxford Group and continued his involvement after it was renamed Moral Re-Armament (MRA) in 1938. Some early A.A. members recalled knowing Rowland from his occasional visits to the old 24th Street Clubhouse, which A.A. members had established in June 1940 in a former stable at 334½ West 24th Street in Manhattan. However, there is no evidence that Rowland ever joined A.A. or considered himself a member.
In 1945,
Rowland Hazard III
[left], 64, died of a coronary occlusion (heart blockage) while working in his
office at Bristol Manufacturing
[right: obituary, The New York Times, 22 Dec 1945]. Rowland had carried the spiritual message of the Oxford Group to Ebby T.,
who then passed it on to Bill W. His position as a top executive of a major
corporation at the time of his death suggests that Rowland had managed to
stop drinking again, despite several known relapses. However, some
historians question whether he was truly sober at the time of his death.He had remained active in the Oxford Group and continued his involvement after it was renamed Moral Re-Armament (MRA) in 1938. Some early A.A. members recalled knowing Rowland from his occasional visits to the old 24th Street Clubhouse, which A.A. members had established in June 1940 in a former stable at 334½ West 24th Street in Manhattan. However, there is no evidence that Rowland ever joined A.A. or considered himself a member.















