1950: Bill W. wrote to Charles W.:
As to changing the Steps themselves, or even the text of the A.A. book, I am assured by many that I could certainly be excommunicated if a word were touched. It is a strange fact of human nature that when a spiritually centered movement starts and finally adopts certain principles, these finally freeze absolutely solid. But what can’t be done respecting the Steps themselves—or any part of the A.A. book—I can make a shift by writing these pieces [i.e., the essays on the Twelve Steps which would be published in Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions in 1953] which I hope people will like.
June in A.A. History—day unknown
1926: [July?] Bill and Lois W. set off from home for another six-month journey investigating publicly-held companies. While they could have flown first class on Bill’s expense account, backed by a $20,000 line of credit [~$376,000 in 2026]. But Lois’s concern about Bill’s drinking made her reluctant to stray from a formula that had at least kept him sober enough to be able to accomplish something. So instead, they drove a second-hand de Soto* that Lois had equipped with curtains, allowing them to sleep by the roadside.
*The de Soto Motor Co.,
sold rebranded Zimmerman cars exclusively from 1913 to 1914. The DeSoto brand,
established by Walter Chrysler in 1928, came later. Thus, a used de Soto
[left: ad for 1913 de Soto Six 55] in 1926 would have been 12 to 13 years old.
According to Diary of Two Motorcycle Hobos, in a note she added in 1973, Lois
said that they bought a 1924 Dodge [right: 1924 Dodge Business Coupe] in
September or October 1926 for $250 [~$4,700 in 2026].
1933: Lois W. took a three-month leave of absence from Macy’s
[left, 1930s], where she earned $22.50
[~$576 in 2026]
per week, plus a 1% commission on sales. To support her husband Bill in his
effort to quit drinking, they spent the summer near Guilford, Vermont, on
the farm of Dr. Leonard Strong and his wife Dorothy (Bill’s sister) who were
vacationing in Europe. During this time, Bill worked hard on the farm and
successfully maintained his sobriety. However, once they returned home to
Brooklyn, he resumed drinking.
1934: Cebra Graves [right], a young lawyer from Bennington, Vermont, was introduced to the Oxford
Group by Rowland Hazard
[left].Cebra had had a strained relationship with his father, a judge who would later choose to release Ebby T. [below right] into the custody of Cebra and Shep Cornell [below left] instead of incarcerating him. In early 1934, Cebra had first met Rowland at a party at his parents’ house. After a particularly heated argument with his father, Cebra left his office in such haste
that he didn’t even
lock the door behind him. He walked south toward Williamstown,
Massachusetts, where Rowland picked him up and took him to the home of
another Oxford Group member. Cebra recounted later
[ellipses in original],… They, as I remember, almost guaranteed that if I’d accept the principles of the Group, that this burden of drink, I believe they called it, would be lifted from me. I did get into the Oxford Group.… It was perfectly true I didn’t stop drinking because that didn’t seem to be required, but I did seem, at least, to drink moderately for quite a while.








































