1940: Robert A. Erwin’s article, “Victims of Alcohol Hold Weekly Meetings
to Aid One Another in Overcoming Weakness for Drink”
[right],
published in Washington, D.C.’s The Sunday Star (presumably the
Sunday edition of The Evening Star), offered a favorable report on
the Washington Group, the first Alcoholics Anonymous group formed in the
District of Columbia.
John Fitzhugh “Fitz” M.
[left]
was one of Bill W.’s early successes at Charles B. Towns Hospital in the
fall of 1935. Although he lived in Cumberstone, Maryland, he spent much of
his early sobriety in New York City, making the long trip from home to
attend A.A. meetings at Bill’s home in Brooklyn.In 1939, Fitz moved to Washington, D.C., where he immediately contacted Hardin C., whose inquiry to the Alcoholic Foundation in New York City had been forwarded to Fitz. They began meeting at Hardin’s apartment and soon recruited Ned F., who had also gotten sober in New York City, along with a retired Navy Commander from California, and other individuals. Their first female member, Dorothy H., joined the following year. James “Jim” B.
[right]
of Philadelphia significantly assisted the D.C. members. He considered the
weekly meetings at Philadelphia General Hospital essential to the success of
the Philadelphia group and urged the D.C. group to work with alcoholics at
the Psychopathic Ward of Gallinger Municipal Hospital. He also introduced
the practice of serving coffee and doughnuts at meetings.The D.C. members revisited the discussion Jim and Fitz had previously held in New York City regarding the references to God in the Big Book. Jim emphasized the psychological approach, while Fitz focused on the religious aspect.
The Sunday Star article would attract many new members, and by the end of the year, the group would grow to 70 members.
The article also briefly mentions a “colored group” meeting on Thursday nights at an unnamed Arlington, Virginia, church. This group was established by a “prominent businessman in the [Washington, D.C.] group.” This businessman, presumably white, brought some of his Black employees, who “needed help to find freedom from rum,” to these meetings. The group was only mentioned again in a later A.A. pamphlet, “Black in A.A.” (P-51), which quoted from the same article.
If true, this would be the oldest Colored/Negro/Black/African-American group of Alcoholics Anonymous, predating the AA-1 Group in St. Louis, Missouri, by approximately five years.
1935: [Late, after May 20] Joseph H. “Joe” W., Jr.* edited Bill Wilson’s second draft of “The Strange Obsession.” The third draft of this story would later serve as the basis for “Bill's Story” in the Big Book, Alcoholics Anonymous. The editor† of Vol. III, No. 3 (Apr–Jun 2007) of Culture Alcohol & Society Quarterly wrote:
In Jim B[urwell]’s account of early AA, one Joe W. (Jim actually records the last name, but it will not be used here) is identified as the man who told Bill to call the book (and the fellowship) Alcoholics Anonymous rather than Anonymous Alcoholics. Jim records that this Joe W. was with The New Yorker, but no New Yorker records available confirmed this. Research among various Joseph W’s who might have been ours provided a Joseph Hooker W., Jr., b. Bridgeport CT February 2, 1895, son of Emma (b. 1875) and Joseph Hooker W. Sr. (1868-1941), a telegrapher and then metering clerk for the railroad. This identification was confirmed when the first page of signatures in the “First Big Book Bought” in the Archives at GSO showed the name Joseph Hooker W-----, Jr. Further research (Bridgeport Post) indicated he was married in the late summer of 1923, when working for the New York Post, and a son. Joseph Hooker W----- III was born October 13, 1924, at which time the W-----s lived in Cos Cob [sic] CT. The marriage notice provides the information that bride and groom would be living on Livingston St. in Brooklyn Heights, that the bride had attended the Pratt Institute and worked for Franklin Simon, and that the groom had attended Bridgeport High School and the Park Avenue Institute, and previously worked for Metropolitan magazine.
































