12 May 2026

May 12 in A.A. History

1935: On this Mother’s Day, 39-year-old Bill W. [near right] met 55-year-old Dr. Bob S. [far right], his wife Anne, and their 17-year-old son Smitty. The meeting took place at 5 p.m. at the Gate Lodge [far left] of the Stan Hywet estate,*the home of Oxford Group member HenriettaBuckler Seiberling [near left]. Dr. Bob was so severely hungover that he couldn’t eat dinner and planned to stay only 15 minutes.
    Left alone in the library, Bill told Bob he wasn’t there to help Bob, but to keep himself sober. Following Dr. Silkworth’s advice, Bill then shared his own experience as an alcoholic, emphasizing the medical hopelessness of the condition rather than preaching. Dr. Bob opened up, and their conversation extended from his planned 15 minutes to over six hours, lasting until after 11 p.m. As Dr. Bob would later recount in his story, “Doctor Bob’s Nightmare”—included in all four editions of the Big Book, Alcoholics Anonymous:
    … he was the first living human with whom I had ever talked, who knew what he was talking about in regard to alcoholism from actual experience. In other words, he talked my language. He knew all the answers, and certainly not because he had picked them up in his reading [emphasis by Dr. Bob].

*This was the home of Franklin Augustus “Frank” Seiberling (1859–1955), who co-founded The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company in 1898 and the Seiberling Rubber Company in 1921. This historic estate includes a 65-room Tudor Revival Manor House, the Gate Lodge, historic gardens, and the Corbin Conservatory. Frank’s son, John Fredrick “Fred” Seiberling (1888–1962), married Henrietta (1888–1979) in 1917. They separated in 1935; Fred subsequently moved back into the Manor House. They never divorced.

1949: Bill W. addressed the American Psychiatric Association’s 105th annual meeting, held at the Mount Royal Hotel [right, 1950 postcard] in Montreal, Quebec. His talk was titled “The Society of Alcoholics Anonymous.”

1956: The First Annual A.A. Convention for England and Wales, a two-day event, was held at the Belle Vue Hotel [left, 1956] in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire. By the time of the convention, 56 English groups were registered with the UK headquarters. Irish speakers Sackville M. and Richard P. addressed the convention.

May in A.A. History—day unknown

1947: The earliest known use of the term “co-founder” in reference to Dr. Bob S. appeared on the first page [right: a fragment of p. 1] of this month’s Central Bulletin, the newsletter of Alcoholics Anonymous in Cleveland, Ohio, in an item titled “Twelfth Anniversary.” This item stated, “[The] mass… meeting will be presided over by Dr. Robert S., one of the co-founders of AA, who will introduce Bill D., the first ‘Guinea Pig’ of Bill and Doc.” [Emphasis in original.]
    Bill also conferred the title of “co-founder” on several other individuals, including William James, Dr. William Silkworth, Rev. Sam Shoemaker, Anne S. (Doctor Bob’s wife), and Sister Ignatia.

11 May 2026

May 11 in A.A. History

1935: It was Saturday. Bill W. [right], less than five months sober, stood in the lobby of the Mayflower Hotel in Akron, Ohio. Howard Tompkins of Baer and Company had involved Bill in a complex proxy fight for control of the National Rubber Machinery Company* in Akron. A successful outcome could have made Bill president, lifting him and Lois out of their dire financial situation. However, the deal fell through, possibly due to rumors of Bill’s drinking. Dejected and distressed, he returned to the Mayflower.
    In the lobby, Bill felt a powerful pull towards the hotel bar. After a brief internal struggle, a sudden realization struck him: his work with alcoholics at Towns Hospital, though unsuccessful for them, had ironically been instrumental in maintaining his own sobriety. Turning away from the bar, he found a public telephone and began calling ministers from a nearby church directory, seeking someone he could work with. He finally reached Rev. Walter Tunks [left], who connected him with Dr. Norman Arthur Shepard, a local member of the Oxford Group. Shepard, in turn, provided the phone number for another member, Henrietta Seiberling [right].
    Henrietta had recently been praying for a particular Oxford Group member who struggled with alcohol. When Bill introduced himself, declaring, “I’m from the Oxford Group, and I’m a rum hound from New York,” Henrietta felt her prayer answered, thinking, “This is really like manna from heaven.” She had been praying for someone to help Dr. Robert “Bob” S. [left], a surgeon who, despite attending her Oxford Group meetings for two and a half years, had been unable to get sober. She told Bill about the doctor. Though she would have invited them both for dinner, the doctor was too drunk to meet anyone that night. Henrietta instead made plans for the two men to meet the following evening at her home, the Gate Lodge
[right] at Stan Hywet, the Seiberling estate.

*T. Henry Williams—at whose home the Oxford Group that included Henrietta, the doctor, and the doctor’s wife met—had lost his job as Chief Engineer of the National Rubber Machinery Company in a reorganization earlier that spring.
There is no basis for believing that it was Lois who pointed this out, as much as many of us would have wanted it that way.

1939: Inspired by the recently published book Alcoholics Anonymous, the first group to adopt that name convened at Albert “Abby” Golrick’s home at 2345 Stillman Road in Cleveland, Ohio [left]. This pioneering group would later be known by several names, including the Cleveland Group, the Stillman Road Group, and the “G” Group.
    Before forming their own fellowship, these Cleveland A.A. members had been part of the Akron, Ohio Oxford Group’s “alcoholic squad,” attending weekly Wednesday meetings. The night before their inaugural meeting, Clarence S. [right] had announced their decision to leave the Akron group and establish an independent one. Clarence later reflected on the Akron group's reaction:
    I made the mistake of telling these people the address. They invaded the house and tried to break up our meeting. One fellow was going to whip me. All in the spirit of pure Christian love! But we stood our ground.

10 May 2026

May 10 in A.A. History

1939: Clarence S. [right] announced at the regular Wednesday night meeting of the Oxford Group in Akron, Ohio, as he later recounted:
    … that this was the last time the Cleveland [Ohio] bunch was down as a contingent—that we were starting a group in Cleveland that would only be open to alcoholics and their families. Also that we were taking the name from the book Alcoholics Anonymous.
    The roof came off the house. “Clarence, you can’t do this!” someone said.
    “It’s done.”
    “We’ve got to talk about his!”
    “It’s too late,” I said.…
    I made the mistake of telling these people the address. 
    Newly sober Albert “Abby” G., [left] a patent attorney from Cleveland, was still in Akron City Hospital, but his wife, Grace, had offered their large home to host the new Cleveland meeting.

1946:  Searcy W. [right] took his last drink, and would remain sober for 57 years, until his death on 30 September 2003.

1962:  Dr. Frederick “Freddie” B. [left: artificially aged from 1923], 81, died in San Diego, California. He had been Bill W.’s first prospect, a man Bill had met just six days after his final discharge from Charles B. Towns Hospital.

1969: For Searcy W.’s 23rd anniversary, Bill W. gave him a signed copy of his paper promoting vitamin B-3 (niacin) therapy, inscribing it: “For / Searcy W. / 5/10/69 / Bill W.” [right: inscription].

May in A.A. History—day unknown

1940: Richmond “Rich” W. [left] took his last drink upon joining the newly formed Boston, Massachusetts, Alcoholics Anonymous group, beginning a lifelong period of sobriety. Rich had first gotten sober in 1939 through the Oxford Group, a time when no A.A. group yet existed in Boston. He had stayed sober for 2½ years before relapsing in 1941. After another 1½ years of drinking, he found permanent recovery with A.A.
    In 1948, after moving to Daytona Beach, Florida, Rich compiled and self-published Twenty-Four Hours a Day [near right: a later book cover] using a mimeograph machine [far right: two cut-and-pasted pages ready for mimeographing]. The book became wildly popular, making him the second best-selling A.A. author, surpassed only by Bill W.
    Rich would die on 25 Mar 1965, at the age of 72, with 22 years of continuous sobriety.

09 May 2026

May 9 in A.A. History

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.

May in A.A. History—day unknown

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].
* Sheehan dated this event to 22 May 1940; Schaberg to May 1940. Olson, however, was uncertain, and neither Pass It On nor Alcoholics Anonymous Comes of Age provides a date.

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.        

08 May 2026

May 8 in A.A. History

1935: Five hundred sober alcoholics gathered in Akron, Ohio, to celebrate the eighth anniversary of Alcoholics Anonymous’s first group. Officially founded on 4 July 1935—the day Bill D. (A.A. #3) was discharged from Akron City Hospital—this group was referred to by Bill W. as “Akron Number One” and is now known as “King School Group #1.” After splitting from the Oxford Group in December 1939, the A.A. group initially met a few times at Dr. Bob S.’s home before relocating to the King School [right] in January 1940. It remained there for many years, possibly until the building closed in 2018.

1971: Following a church memorial service [left: with a white-haired Lois sitting front right], Bill W. was buried [right: gravesite] in a private ceremony at East Dorset Cemetery in East Dorset, Vermont. He had always wanted to be buried there with his family, so his body, enclosed in a Vermont oak casket, was kept in cold storage in Miami, Florida, until the New England ground thawed enough for the burial.

May in A.A. History—day unknown

1940:  Dave W. of Seattle, Washington [left: aerial view, 1930], connected with Mrs. J.J.S. and Margaret D. Both women had sent letters of inquiry to the Alcoholic Foundation in New York City, in November 1939 and February 1940, respectively. Ruth Hock, who had been corresponding with Dave from the Foundation since March, facilitated their connection. With all three living in Seattle, Dave assisted in establishing the first Alcoholics Anonymous group there and in the state.

1940: [March? April?] In Little Rock, Arkansas, Sterling C., Harlan N., and Bud G. founded the first Alcoholics Anonymous group, located in the Wallace Building [right] at the corner of Markham and Main Streets. This group was unique, earning the distinction of being “the first group formed solely by mail.” This meant its members relied entirely on reading the Big Book, without the benefit of attending an existing A.A. meeting or receiving in-person guidance from established members.
    To ensure the seriousness of potential members, the founders implemented a rigorous screening process, asking four key questions:
  1. Are you convinced you cannot handle your alcohol problem?
  2. Are you willing to let a group of fellows who had the same problem prescribe a course of action?
  3. Will you do anything to eliminate alcohol from your life? 
  4. Do you believe in a power bigger than yourself?
    A prospect unable to answer “yes” to all four questions was advised to return later. If accepted, however, he faced a set of requirements:
  1. Read the Big Book in three days;
  2. keep a 28-day journal;
  3. write his case history;
  4. make time and money budgets;
  5. if employed, take a two-week leave of absence to devote full time to the plan; and 
  6. accomplish other assignments given to him by his sponsor.
    This rigorous and structured approach became widely known as “The Little Rock Plan.”

07 May 2026

May 7 in A.A. History

1946: An article titled “AA Fights Alcoholism As Disease” [right] was published in The Seafarers Log, the official publication of the Atlantic and Gulf Region of the Seafarers International Union of North America. The article references the Alcoholics Anonymous Seamen’s Club (334½ W. 24th St., New York City), its pamphlet “For Seamen Who Drink,” and its newsletter, The Ropeyarn. 

1973: In an episode titled “Alcoholic Women,” David Susskind interviewed five women who were members of Alcoholics Anonymous on his television program, The David Susskind Show [left: Susskind interviewing a Mafia hit man, 1973].

1994:  The AA Flanders National Congress [near right: program cover; far right: flyer] took place in Ypres, Belgium [left: view of the Cloth Hall (a.k.a.Expo Hall) at the Grote Markt (Market Square) of Ypres, where this event occurred].
    A rough translation of the program cover reads:
  
MAY 7, 1994 / Start at 10:00 a.m. / DIET* [of] ANONYMOUS ALCOHOLISTS / WESTHOEK - EXPO HALLS / YPRES / AA: “E”VERYTHING “E”LSE

* The term ‘Diet’ is a translation of Landdag, which literally means “country day” or “country assembly.” In this context, ‘Diet’ refers to a formal deliberative assembly.


May in A.A. History—day unknown

1939: Henry “Hank” P.’s company, Honor Dealers, was forced to relocate for the second time in a year when the sheriff arrived with an eviction notice due to non-payment of rent. Despite this setback, the resourceful Hank managed to negotiate a deal that allowed him and secretary Ruth Hock to move to a much smaller office (from #601 to #604) on the same floor of the building at 17 Williams Street [left] in Newark, New Jersey. Bill W. later remarked that it was “a tiny room barely big enough to contain Henry’s large desk, his overstuffed chair, a couple of file cabinets, and Ruth and her typewriter. For callers there was standing room only.”

1939: At the first Alcoholics Anonymous meeting held at the Upper Montclair, New Jersey home [right] of Hank and Kathleen P. (counted by some as A.A. Group #4), attendees voted to establish a Home Replacement Fund for Bill and Lois W. This decision was made while Lois and Bill were out, running an errand. Upon their return, Lois recorded in her diary that they were thrilled by the initiative and the pledges made. In Lois Remembers, her memoir, she wrote,
    The local group, meeting at the home of Hank and Kathleen, voted to provide a “Bill and Lois Improvement Fund” (they didn’t state just what was to be improved—perhaps our dispositions!) and passed the hat at meetings to raise money to help meet our living expenses for a year. I believe we were richer by twenty dollars [~$375 in 2026] a month because of their generosity.

06 May 2026

May 6 in A.A. History

1896: Gilbert “Gib” K., was born in Germania, Wisconsin. He would establish the first A.A. group in Milwaukee; it was the first in Wisconsin as well.

1939: Clarence S. [left], not for the first time, approached his sponsor, Dr. Bob S. [right], to discuss the challenges Catholic alcoholics faced within the Oxford Group. This group served as the meeting place for early alcoholics around Akron, Ohio, until Alcoholics Anonymous separated from them in late 1939.
Dr. Bob:  What do you have in mind?
Clarence:  To start a group without all this rigmarole that’s offensive to other people. We have a book now, the Steps, the absolutes. Anyone can live by that program. We can start our own meetings.
Dr. Bob:  (referring to OG members, especially to Henrietta Seiberling, and to T. Henry and Clarace Williams) We can’t abandon these people. We owe our lives to them.
Clarence:  So what? I owe my life to them, too. But what about all these others?, referring to Catholic A.A. members.
Dr. Bob:  We can’t do anything about them.
Clarence:  Oh yes, we can.
Dr. Bob:  Like what?
Clarence:  You’ll see.
    Less than a week later, Clarence founded the first A.A. group in Cleveland, Ohio, widely recognized as the third A.A. group overall. This group was also the first to adopt the name “Alcoholics Anonymous,” taking it from the book published just the previous month.

  1941: The first Alcoholics Anonymous meeting in St. Paul, Minnesota, took place in the home of Dr. Glenn Clark [left], a non-alcoholic professor at Macalester College. Inspired by Jack Alexander’s article in The Saturday Evening Post, Dr. Clark sought to help a friend struggling with alcoholism. Just weeks later, a local story in the St. Paul Pioneer Press further boosted membership to 15, including the group’s first woman.

1947: A letter from the New York office to group secretaries announced the availability of Bill Wilson’s first known recorded talk. Made the previous month, this wire-recording* captured a brief talk of just over 13 minutes (though initially referred to as 15 minutes)—a notably short duration for Bill. Bill had initially been very reluctant to make any recordings but had finally agreed.
     The original wire-recording was first converted to a 16-inch vinyl record, then subsequently to a set of two 12-inch phonograph records
[right: 1 × 16" vs. 2 × 12" records]. This conversion ensured compatibility with standard phonographs, as not everyone owned equipment that could play the larger 16-inch size.
    The June A.A. Grapevine further publicized the availability of these recordings, describing them
[left] as 
    A 15-minute general talk on A.A. by Bill has been transcribed on a set of two regular 12-inch phonograph records. The records can be played on any standard phonograph.
    These records, which are of interest to A.A. members, groups and friends of A.A., are available at the price of $3.30 per set, prepaid air express, New York; $4.00, Canada.
    The records may be obtained by writing Works Publishing Co., Inc., P.O. Box 459, Grand Central Annex, New York 17.
    Because the set is sold at near-cost price, it is requested that persons ordering it enclose check or money order with letter. Cost of the set to persons in foreign countries may be obtained on request.

*Recorded on a thin metal wire coated with magnetized particles [right: spools of recording wire].