1927:
Bill W.’s paternal grandmother, Helen Barrows W.
[near right], 83, died in Manchester, Vermont, where she had been living with her
sister, Alice Ambrose, for the preceding year or two. She would be buried in
the East Dorset Cemetery
[far left: Helen’s obituary from the Rutland Daily Herald of Rutland,
Vermont, 8 March 1927; near left: Helen’s gravestone].
Many years earlier, Helen’s parents, Blake and Betsey Barrows, had operated the hotel in East Dorset, now known as W―― House
[right, recent]. Although the hotel had briefly changed ownership, Helen and her husband,
William Curtis W., eventually had acquired the property and took over its
management. It was behind the bar there that Bill W. had been born in
1895.
1938: Frank Amos [far left]
was visiting Akron, Ohio, to gather information about the “Alcoholic
Squadron” of the Oxford Group for John D. Rockefeller Jr.
[near left]
and his associates. He spent his first day at the home of Dr. Bob and Anne
S.
[right], where a steady stream of visitors came and went. Frank later noted in his
report:
[O]nly one other of the alcoholic group knew why I was there—that was Paul S―― [far left] who was at the meeting we had in the Rockefeller Center. I was introduced as a friend of “Bill” W.’s… and as a Christian layman deeply interested in their work.
When introduced to T. Henry Williams
[near left], he identified himself merely as a representative of four Christian laymen
interested in Dr. Bob’s work with alcoholics.
Throughout the day, Frank interacted with several of the “fifty men, and, I believe, two women” who were now sober in Akron. He “met and talked with about half of these men with their wives and, in one or two cases, their mothers.” He was pleasantly surprised by their openness regarding Dr. Bob, noting that:
without any prompting on my part, they emphasized how vital Smith was at this time to their work. Several told me they knew he was sacrificing his professional and remunerative work for this and that something must be done to help him handle both without spoiling either.
On Saturday night, Paul [right] and Hildreth Stanley would drive Frank 85 miles [~ 137 km] south to his hometown of Cambridge, Ohio, where he would visit relatives and familiarize himself with the current status of the family newspaper business, the Daily Jeffersonian. He would stay two days and return to Akron late in the afternoon of the 14th.
1945: The Alcoholic Foundation’s service office in New York City sent a letter to all known A.A. groups explaining that, due to paper rationing for the World War II effort, the War Production Board had ordered a reduction in the weight of
paper used for the Big Book, Alcoholics Anonymous. To further
conserve materials, the margins were trimmed to a minimum, which, along with
the lighter paper, reduced the book’s overall size. During the war, two
limited-quantity printings were produced—the 8th and 9th printings of the first edition; both contained a notice of explanation [left: both printings with enlarged notice in foreground].
[far left: Helen’s obituary from the Rutland Daily Herald of Rutland,
Vermont, 8 March 1927; near left: Helen’s gravestone].Many years earlier, Helen’s parents, Blake and Betsey Barrows, had operated the hotel in East Dorset, now known as W―― House
[right, recent]. Although the hotel had briefly changed ownership, Helen and her husband,
William Curtis W., eventually had acquired the property and took over its
management. It was behind the bar there that Bill W. had been born in
1895.
1938: Frank Amos [far left]
was visiting Akron, Ohio, to gather information about the “Alcoholic
Squadron” of the Oxford Group for John D. Rockefeller Jr.
[near left]
and his associates. He spent his first day at the home of Dr. Bob and Anne
S.
[right], where a steady stream of visitors came and went. Frank later noted in his
report:[O]nly one other of the alcoholic group knew why I was there—that was Paul S―― [far left] who was at the meeting we had in the Rockefeller Center. I was introduced as a friend of “Bill” W.’s… and as a Christian layman deeply interested in their work.
When introduced to T. Henry Williams
[near left], he identified himself merely as a representative of four Christian laymen
interested in Dr. Bob’s work with alcoholics.Throughout the day, Frank interacted with several of the “fifty men, and, I believe, two women” who were now sober in Akron. He “met and talked with about half of these men with their wives and, in one or two cases, their mothers.” He was pleasantly surprised by their openness regarding Dr. Bob, noting that:
without any prompting on my part, they emphasized how vital Smith was at this time to their work. Several told me they knew he was sacrificing his professional and remunerative work for this and that something must be done to help him handle both without spoiling either.
On Saturday night, Paul [right] and Hildreth Stanley would drive Frank 85 miles [~ 137 km] south to his hometown of Cambridge, Ohio, where he would visit relatives and familiarize himself with the current status of the family newspaper business, the Daily Jeffersonian. He would stay two days and return to Akron late in the afternoon of the 14th.
1945: The Alcoholic Foundation’s service office in New York City sent a letter to all known A.A. groups explaining that, due to paper rationing for the World War II effort, the War Production Board had ordered a reduction in the weight of
paper used for the Big Book, Alcoholics Anonymous. To further
conserve materials, the margins were trimmed to a minimum, which, along with
the lighter paper, reduced the book’s overall size. During the war, two
limited-quantity printings were produced—the 8th and 9th printings of the first edition; both contained a notice of explanation [left: both printings with enlarged notice in foreground].









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