His story, “The Car Smasher,” was published in the first edition of the Big Book, Alcoholics Anonymous, and outlined the four-step program he recommended:
He later revised his story for the second and third editions; it was retitled “He Had To Be Shown.”First: Have a real desire to quit.
Second: Admit you can’t. (This is the hardest.)
Third: Ask for His ever-present help.
Fourth: Accept and acknowledge this help.
1942: In Columbus, Ohio, The Columbus Group split into two groups. Fourteen members left to establish the Central Group at the Odd Fellows Temple, located at 24 W. Goodale St. This new group decided to install a phone and set up an office at the temple for Twelfth Step calls. Additionally, the Central Group was responsible for printing one of the earliest A.A. newsletters.
1942: Ruth Hock [far left]
left the New York City Alcoholic Foundation office to marry Phil Crocelius;
Margaret “Bobbie” B.
[near left]
took her place as National Secretary, A.A.’s second and last. Bobbie had
been a professional dancer in the U.S. and Europe during the 1920s and, as
Ruth noted, in the fashion of the 1940s, wore “tiny little hats and went
tripping along in her high heels, but was a fantastic communicator.”1947: The Naugatuck (Connecticut) Daily News reported that Edward McDermott, the executive director of Easy Acres in Newtown, a state sanitarium for neurotics, spoke at a meeting of the Waterbury Junior Club on the topic of “Alcoholism and Alcoholics Anonymous.”
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