1995:
Fifty-six thousand people celebrated the 60th Anniversary of Alcoholics
Anonymous at the 10th International Convention in San Diego,
California
[left: sketches from Box 4-5-9, Aug/Sep 1995; right: Saturday night Big
Meeting].
2000:
Forty-seven thousand people gathered in Minneapolis, Minnesota, for the 11th
International Convention, celebrating Alcoholics Anonymous’s 65th
Anniversary
[left: Saturday night Big Meeting].
Today in A.A. History—June 29–July 4
1913: Seventeen-year-old Bill W. accompanied his maternal grandfather, Gardner Fayette Griffith [below left:, superimposed], to the 50th anniversary of the Battle of Gettysburg, where Fayette had fought in the Civil War.
The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, in collaboration with the Federal War Department, meticulously organized this spectacular event. It drew 53,407 veterans, including approximately 8,750 former Confederates, making it the largest Civil War veterans’ reunion ever held. All honorably discharged veterans of the Grand Army of the Republic and the United Confederate Veterans were invited, with attendees from 46 of the 48 states. Bill and Fayette likely stayed at the Great Camp [below], a tent city officially known as The Peace Reunion Camp of the Blue and Gray, which the War Department established on leased farmland near the battlefield.
Fayette pointed out the location where his
military unit, Company B of the 14th Vermont Infantry, along with other
Vermont regiments, had outflanked Pickett’s Charge and significantly
contributed to the Union victory
[right: gold arrow at bottom showing Company B’s position]. The hot days featured numerous speeches and exhibits, concluding with an
address by President Woodrow Wilson on July 4th.
A.A. History—month & day unknown
1930: After Bill W. was dismissed from Greenshields and Co. in Montreal, Quebec, by his friend Dick Johnson, he and Lois took a train to the Burnhams’ “Camp” in Vermont. Soon after, Lois went ahead to her parent’s at 182 Clinton St. in Brooklyn. Bill joined her shortly afterward and they lived there till being evicted in April 1939.




















































