1941: In Hartford, Connecticut
[right: downtown, early 1945], two men who would be instrumental in establishing Alcoholics Anonymous
(A.A.) in the city each took his last drink independently, only meeting and
learning of each other shortly afterward.Hal S., a member of the Shaker Heights Group in Ohio, was in Hartford on business when he inquired of a doctor where he might find local alcoholics. The doctor knew of none, but his nurse provided Hal with the name of Harold “Red” W. Hal called Red that evening, but Red was “indisposed.” They eventually met a few days later, and Red had his last drink on May 30.
Meanwhile, Harold H., a salesman and
periodic drunk, had read Jack Alexander’s article in
The Saturday Evening Post
[left: cover]. However, he was put off by the “God business” and had resigned himself to
remaining a drunk. Shortly thereafter, he found himself in a hospital after
being beaten up and arrested. Upon his release, he attended a party on May
30, where he encountered an old drinking buddy, Brad P., who had sobered up in the Scarsdale
Group in New York. Brad asked Harold if he wanted to die as an alcoholic.
Having recently witnessed a man suffer from delirium tremens (the
DTs), Harold said no and never drank again.Soon after, Harold and Red met and began recruiting other drunks.
1944: An article in Georgia’s The Atlanta Constitution titled
“‘Bill’ [W.] Defines Alcoholic as ‘Bankrupt Idealist’”
[right]
demonstrates that Bill used the term “bankrupt idealist” eight years prior
to its appearance in Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions (Tradition 6, page
156).
1964: Ebby T. arrived at McPike’s Farm
[left], an innovative alcoholism treatment facility located in Galway, New York,
near Saratoga Springs. Founded by Margaret and Mickey M. in the winter of
1958, the farm offered Ebby a chance to find peace and relief from the inner
turmoil that had plagued him for much of his life. Sadly, he died in a
nearby hospital less than two years later.
Today in A.A. History—May 30–June 1
1970: The three-day Third Thekwini Round-up
[left: program cover]
commenced in South Africa. The term Thekwini is synonymous with
eThekwini (Zulu: derived from itheku, meaning bay, lagoon, or
port) and refers to a South African metropolitan municipality established in
2000. This municipality encompasses the city of Durban and its surrounding
towns.














































