1939: Hank P. placed a small ad for the book Alcoholics Anonymous in
The New York Times
[left: in context]. The ad, which cost $200
[~$4,700 in 2026], ran on page 2 and proved to be a worthwhile investment. It generated a
considerable number of direct responses, and, as Hank had hoped, The New
York Times published a positive review of the book two and a half months
later.
1939: Bill W. had reserved one first-edition copy of Alcoholics Anonymous as a Christmas gift for Lois and submitted two copies to the Library of Congress to initiate the copyright registration. He and Hank Parkhurst sent the next 29 copies to the contributing authors of the stories in the book. The following 40 copies were allocated to non-alcoholic subscribers of Works Publishing’s stock. This left only 40 copies available to sell, which, at the list price of $3.50 [~$82 in 2026], would have generated only $140 [~$3,290 in 2026] for the Alcoholic Foundation.
1939: Margaret “Marty” M. [right: at Blythewood Sanitarium, 4 July 1938] attended her first Alcoholics Anonymous meeting at the Brooklyn home of Bill and Lois W., located at 182 Clinton Street.
1941: After nearly two years and, by Lois’s count, stays in 52 different
places, Bill and Lois W. moved into their own home
[left]
in Bedford Hills, New York, which they initially named “Bil-Lo’s
Break.” This period of instability followed the foreclosure on the Burnham
home at 182 Clinton Street in Brooklyn, where Lois had been born and lived
until 1927. In 1944, they would rename their Bedford Hills home “Stepping
Stones.”
1939: Bill W. had reserved one first-edition copy of Alcoholics Anonymous as a Christmas gift for Lois and submitted two copies to the Library of Congress to initiate the copyright registration. He and Hank Parkhurst sent the next 29 copies to the contributing authors of the stories in the book. The following 40 copies were allocated to non-alcoholic subscribers of Works Publishing’s stock. This left only 40 copies available to sell, which, at the list price of $3.50 [~$82 in 2026], would have generated only $140 [~$3,290 in 2026] for the Alcoholic Foundation.
1939: Margaret “Marty” M. [right: at Blythewood Sanitarium, 4 July 1938] attended her first Alcoholics Anonymous meeting at the Brooklyn home of Bill and Lois W., located at 182 Clinton Street.
1941: After nearly two years and, by Lois’s count, stays in 52 different
places, Bill and Lois W. moved into their own home
[left]
in Bedford Hills, New York, which they initially named “Bil-Lo’s
Break.” This period of instability followed the foreclosure on the Burnham
home at 182 Clinton Street in Brooklyn, where Lois had been born and lived
until 1927. In 1944, they would rename their Bedford Hills home “Stepping
Stones.”




























