1882: Silas B. [right, as an adult]
was born in Millersburg, Kentucky, the youngest of three known children of
Rev. James McClelland and Sarah Ann “Sallie” B. He would become a journalist
and author. In late November 1935, he would get sober in New York City,
becoming A.A. #4 there. Then shortly before the Big Book was published,
Silas would write the earliest published story about Alcoholics Anonymous,
which appeared in the 19 January 1939, issue of The Hackettstown (NJ)
Courier-Post. Unfortunately, however, he would relapse within a year
and die in 1945.
1944: At the invitation of Drs. Silkworth and Tiebout, Bill W. spoke on
“Basic Concepts of Alcoholics Anonymous” to the Section on Neurology and
Psychiatry during the annual meeting of the Medical Society of the State of
New York. This took place at the Hotel Pennsylvania
[left]
in New York City, located on the east side of Seventh Avenue between W.
32nd and W. 33rd Streets.
1940: *Bill W. transferred his Works Publishing shares
[right: certificate for one share]
(one third of the total issued) to the Alcoholic Foundation. He then sought
to persuade a hesitant Hank P., who had relapsed in 1939 and was still
drinking, to transfer his own one-third share. Hank eventually agreed, but
only if he was first paid for the Honors Dealers’ office furniture. Bill had
moved this furniture in February from 17 Williams Street, Newark, New
Jersey, to 30 Vesey Street, New York City (Lower Manhattan). Despite Bill’s
claim that he had had already paid Hank for it, he consented to have
the Alcoholic Foundation purchase the furniture a second time for $200 [~$4,700 in 2026].
1941: Chicago, Illinois, established Alcoholics Anonymous’s first organized local service center. Members of A.A. there opened a Central Office at 127 N. Dearborn St.
[left], a development Bill W. highlighted in
Alcoholics Anonymous Comes of Age. He noted, “This was A.A.’s first
organized local service center, the forerunner of the many Intergroup
Associations we maintain in large cities nowadays.”While there was once debate about whether Chicago or Cleveland, Ohio, had A.A.’s first Central Office, the Cleveland A.A. website now acknowledges Chicago’s primacy. Cleveland’s claim centered on the formation of its “Cuyahoga County A/A Committee” (later called the Central Committee), which How It Worked reports was formed at a meeting on 2 March 1941, in a Cleveland Switchboard Co. office. Doctor Bob and the Good Oldtimers even refers to this as “the first central committee.”
However, this committee did not meet until early
August, and Cleveland members subsequently established their District
[Central] Office in the Williamson Building
[right], on the southeast corner of Public Square at Euclid
Ave. in August 1941.This timeline clearly places Cleveland’s operational office after Chicago’s.











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