1935: Following Prohibition’s failure, Everett Colby
[left]
hosted a dinner in New York City to secure funding from “drys” for his
educational program, “The Council for Moderation,” which promoted temperate
drinking. In Alcoholics Anonymous and the Rockefeller Connection, Jay
D. Moore says,The dinner was… educational in nature, luminaries made presentations… and the invitees included a who’s who of American power… In fact, perusing the list of those who attended the dinner one finds many of the names that attended the dinner for Alcoholics Anonymous.
that his self-imposed philanthropic limits were inviolate… The Colby dinner draws a parallel to the 1940 AA Rockefeller dinner that cannot be brushed off. The similarities are unmistakable…
1943: In New Orleans, Louisiana, The Times-Picayune reported
in an article
[left]
titled “Alcoholics Anonymous Unit Is Being Formed in Orleans” that the
city’s first A.A. group was being formed.Organization of a New Orleans chapter of Alcoholics Anonymous [is] underway with a nucleus of more than a dozen members, part of a unique group of more than 8000 men and women in the United States that have banded together to fight the disease of alcoholism.
May in A.A. History—day unknown
1932: Sober for five weeks, Bill W. traveled with several engineers to
Bound Brook, New Jersey, in mid-May to investigate a new photographic
process at Pathé Laboratories
[right].
Bill, managing partner in a stock-buying syndicate he had formed with
Arthur Wheeler and Frank Winans in April, faced high stakes: his partnership
agreement stipulated that if he drank, he would forfeit his entire share,
including his original investment.After dinner, the engineers started a poker game and invited Bill to join, but he declined. Soon, a jug of applejack, known as Jersey Lightning
[left], appeared. Bill repeatedly refused offers of a drink. By midnight, his
thoughts drifted to his drinking past: the Bronx cocktail that had been his
first, the brandies he had on the ship to Europe during World War I, and the
French wines. He began to mentally list his drinking history, wondering what
he hadn't tasted. When the engineers offered him a drink again, he realized
he had never tried Jersey Lightning. He thought, “Why not? What harm could
one taste do?”He was drunk for three days. When his partners learned what had happened, they dismissed him, and he forfeited his entire interest in the syndicate.



























